CAR T cells produced in vivo to treat cardiac injury.
Joel G RurikIstván TombáczAmir YadegariPedro O Méndez FernándezSwapnil V ShewaleLi LiToru KimuraOusamah Younoss SolimanTyler E PappYing K TamBarbara L MuiSteven M AlbeldaEllen PuréCarl H JuneHaig AghajanianDrew WeissmanHamideh ParhizJonathan A EpsteinPublished in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2022)
Fibrosis affects millions of people with cardiac disease. We developed a therapeutic approach to generate transient antifibrotic chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells in vivo by delivering modified messenger RNA (mRNA) in T cell–targeted lipid nanoparticles (LNPs). The efficacy of these in vivo–reprogrammed CAR T cells was evaluated by injecting CD5-targeted LNPs into a mouse model of heart failure. Efficient delivery of modified mRNA encoding the CAR to T lymphocytes was observed, which produced transient, effective CAR T cells in vivo. Antifibrotic CAR T cells exhibited trogocytosis and retained the target antigen as they accumulated in the spleen. Treatment with modified mRNA-targeted LNPs reduced fibrosis and restored cardiac function after injury. In vivo generation of CAR T cells may hold promise as a therapeutic platform to treat various diseases.