Login / Signup

Inserting EF1α-driven CD7-specific CAR at CD7 locus reduces fratricide and enhances tumor rejection.

Jie JiangJiangqing ChenChan LiaoYanting DuanYajie WangKai ShangYanjie HuangYongming TangXiaofei GaoYing GuJie Sun
Published in: Leukemia (2023)
CAR-T therapies to treat T-cell malignancies face unique hurdles. Normal and malignant T cells usually express the same target for CAR, leading to fratricide. CAR-T cells targeting CD7, which is expressed in various malignant T cells, have limited expansion due to fratricide. Using CRISPR/Cas9 to knockout CD7 can reduce the fratricide. Here we developed a 2-in-1 strategy to insert EF1α-driven CD7-specific CAR at the disrupted CD7 locus and compared it to two other known strategies: one was random integration of CAR by a retrovirus and the other was site-specific integration at T-cell receptor alpha constant (TRAC) locus, both in the context of CD7 disruption. All three types of CD7 CAR-T cells with reduced fratricide could expand well and displayed potent cytotoxicity to both CD7 + tumor cell lines and patient-derived primary tumors. Moreover, EF1α-driven CAR expressed at the CD7 locus enhances tumor rejection in a mouse xenograft model of T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL), suggesting great clinical application potential. Additionally, this 2-in-1 strategy was adopted to generate CD7-specific CAR-NK cells as NK also expresses CD7, which would prevent contamination from malignant cells. Thus, our synchronized antigen-knockout CAR-knockin strategy could reduce the fratricide and enhance anti-tumor activity, advancing clinical CAR-T treatment of T-cell malignancies.
Keyphrases
  • nk cells
  • acute lymphoblastic leukemia
  • crispr cas
  • risk assessment
  • acute myeloid leukemia
  • cell death
  • drinking water
  • genome editing
  • cell proliferation
  • cancer therapy
  • human health
  • cell cycle arrest