Massively parallel knock-in engineering of human T cells.
Xiaoyun DaiJonathan J ParkYa-Ying DuZhenkun NaStanley Z LamRyan D ChowPaul A RenauerJianlei GuShan XinZhiyuan ChuCun LiaoPaul ClarkHongyu ZhaoSarah A SlavoffSidi ChenPublished in: Nature biotechnology (2023)
The efficiency of targeted knock-in for cell therapeutic applications is generally low, and the scale is limited. In this study, we developed CLASH, a system that enables high-efficiency, high-throughput knock-in engineering. In CLASH, Cas12a/Cpf1 mRNA combined with pooled adeno-associated viruses mediate simultaneous gene editing and precise transgene knock-in using massively parallel homology-directed repair, thereby producing a pool of stably integrated mutant variants each with targeted gene editing. We applied this technology in primary human T cells and performed time-coursed CLASH experiments in blood cancer and solid tumor models using CD3, CD8 and CD4 T cells, enabling pooled generation and unbiased selection of favorable CAR-T variants. Emerging from CLASH experiments, a unique CRISPR RNA (crRNA) generates an exon3 skip mutant of PRDM1 in CAR-Ts, which leads to increased proliferation, stem-like properties, central memory and longevity in these cells, resulting in higher efficacy in vivo across multiple cancer models, including a solid tumor model. The versatility of CLASH makes it broadly applicable to diverse cellular and therapeutic engineering applications.
Keyphrases
- genome editing
- endothelial cells
- papillary thyroid
- high efficiency
- high throughput
- crispr cas
- copy number
- squamous cell
- single cell
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- induced apoptosis
- cancer therapy
- pluripotent stem cells
- randomized controlled trial
- genome wide
- working memory
- signaling pathway
- lymph node metastasis
- cell cycle arrest
- stem cells
- childhood cancer
- wild type
- dna methylation
- phase iii
- binding protein
- bone marrow