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Engineering CAR-T cells to activate small-molecule drugs in situ.

Thomas J GardnerJ Peter LeeChristopher M BourneDinali WijewarnasuriyaNihar KinarivalaKeifer G KurtzBroderick C CorlessMegan M DacekAaron Y ChangGeorge MoKha M NguyenRenier J BrentjensDerek S TanDavid A Scheinberg
Published in: Nature chemical biology (2021)
Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-T cells represent a major breakthrough in cancer therapy, wherein a patient's own T cells are engineered to recognize a tumor antigen, resulting in activation of a local cytotoxic immune response. However, CAR-T cell therapies are currently limited to the treatment of B cell cancers and their effectiveness is hindered by resistance from antigen-negative tumor cells, immunosuppression in the tumor microenvironment, eventual exhaustion of T cell immunologic functions and frequent severe toxicities. To overcome these problems, we have developed a novel class of CAR-T cells engineered to express an enzyme that activates a systemically administered small-molecule prodrug in situ at a tumor site. We show that these synthetic enzyme-armed killer (SEAKER) cells exhibit enhanced anticancer activity with small-molecule prodrugs, both in vitro and in vivo in mouse tumor models. This modular platform enables combined targeting of cellular and small-molecule therapies to treat cancers and potentially a variety of other diseases.
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