Treatment of allergic eosinophilic asthma through engineered IL-5-anchored chimeric antigen receptor T cells.
Sisi ChenGaoying ChenFang XuBeibei SunXinyi ChenWei HuFei LiMadiha Zahra SyedaHaixia ChenYouqian WuPeng WuRuirui JingXinwei GengLingling ZhangLongguang TangWen LiZhihua ChenChao ZhangJie SunWei J ChenHuahao ShenSongmin YingPublished in: Cell discovery (2022)
Severe eosinophilic asthma (SEA) is a therapy-resistant respiratory condition with poor clinical control. Treatment efficacy and patient compliance of current therapies remain unsatisfactory. Here, inspired by the remarkable success of chimeric antigen receptor-based cellular adoptive immunotherapies demonstrated for the treatment of a variety of malignant tumors, we engineered a cytokine-anchored chimeric antigen receptor T (CCAR-T) cell system using a chimeric IL-5-CD28-CD3ζ receptor to trigger T-cell-mediated killing of eosinophils that are elevated during severe asthma attacks. IL-5-anchored CCAR-T cells exhibited selective and effective killing capacity in vitro and restricted eosinophil differentiation with apparent protection against allergic airway inflammation in two mouse models of asthma. Notably, a single dose of IL-5-anchored CCAR-T cells resulted in persistent protection against asthma-related conditions over three months, significantly exceeding the typical therapeutic window of current mAb-based treatments in the clinics. This study presents a cell-based treatment strategy for SEA and could set the stage for a new era of precision therapies against a variety of intractable allergic diseases in the future.