A high-density microfluidic bioreactor for the automated manufacturing of CAR T cells.
Wei-Xiang SinNarendra Suhas JagannathanDenise Bei Lin TeoFaris KairiShin Yie FongJoel Heng Loong TanDedy SandikinKa-Wai CheungYen Hoon LuahXiaolin WuJoshua Jebaraj RaymondFrancesca Lorraine Wei Inng LimYie Hou LeeMichaela Su-Fern SengShui Yen SohQingfeng ChenRajeev J RamLisa Tucker-KelloggMichael E BirnbaumPublished in: Nature biomedical engineering (2024)
The manufacturing of autologous chimaeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells largely relies either on fed-batch and manual processes that often lack environmental monitoring and control or on bioreactors that cannot be easily scaled out to meet patient demands. Here we show that human primary T cells can be activated, transduced and expanded to high densities in a 2 ml automated closed-system microfluidic bioreactor to produce viable anti-CD19 CAR T cells (specifically, more than 60 million CAR T cells from donor cells derived from patients with lymphoma and more than 200 million CAR T cells from healthy donors). The in vitro secretion of cytokines, the short-term cytotoxic activity and the long-term persistence and proliferation of the cell products, as well as their in vivo anti-leukaemic activity, were comparable to those of T cells produced in a gas-permeable well. The manufacturing-process intensification enabled by the miniaturized perfusable bioreactor may facilitate the analysis of the growth and metabolic states of CAR T cells during ex vivo culture, the high-throughput optimization of cell-manufacturing processes and the scale out of cell-therapy manufacturing.
Keyphrases
- cell therapy
- high throughput
- single cell
- wastewater treatment
- induced apoptosis
- high density
- stem cells
- cell cycle arrest
- mesenchymal stem cells
- endothelial cells
- machine learning
- signaling pathway
- deep learning
- circulating tumor cells
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- cell death
- room temperature
- human health
- platelet rich plasma
- pi k akt
- anaerobic digestion
- carbon dioxide