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Separation of Activated T Cells Using Multidimensional Double Spiral (MDDS) Inertial Microfluidics for High-Efficiency CAR T Cell Manufacturing.

Hyungkook JeonCaleb R PerezTaeyoon KyungMichael E BirnbaumJongyoon Han
Published in: Analytical chemistry (2024)
This study introduces a T cell enrichment process, capitalizing on the size differences between activated and unactivated T cells to facilitate the isolation of activated, transducible T cells. By employing multidimensional double spiral (MDDS) inertial sorting, our approach aims to remove unactivated or not fully activated T cells post-activation, consequently enhancing the efficiency of chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell manufacturing. Our findings reveal that incorporating a simple, label-free, and continuous MDDS sorting step yields a purer T cell population, exhibiting significantly enhanced viability and CAR-transducibility (with up to 85% removal of unactivated T cells and approximately 80% recovery of activated T cells); we found approximately 2-fold increase in CAR transduction efficiency for a specific sample, escalating from ∼10% to ∼20%, but this efficiency highly depends on the original T cell sample as MDDS sorting would be more effective for samples possessing a higher proportion of unactivated T cells. This new cell separation process could augment the efficiency, yield, and cost-effectiveness of CAR T cell manufacturing, potentially broadening the accessibility of this transformative therapy and contributing to improved patient outcomes.
Keyphrases
  • high efficiency
  • label free
  • single cell
  • stem cells
  • gene expression