High-throughput continuous-flow microfluidic electroporation of mRNA into primary human T cells for applications in cellular therapy manufacturing.
Charles A LissandrelloJose A SantosPeter HsiMichaela WelchVienna L MottErnest S KimJordan ChesinNerses J HaroutunianAaron G StoddardAndrew CzarneckiJonathan R CoppetaDaniel K FreemanDeborah A FlusbergJenna L BalestriniVishal TandonPublished in: Scientific reports (2020)
Implementation of gene editing technologies such as CRISPR/Cas9 in the manufacture of novel cell-based therapeutics has the potential to enable highly-targeted, stable, and persistent genome modifications without the use of viral vectors. Electroporation has emerged as a preferred method for delivering gene-editing machinery to target cells, but a major challenge remaining is that most commercial electroporation machines are built for research and process development rather than for large-scale, automated cellular therapy manufacturing. Here we present a microfluidic continuous-flow electrotransfection device designed for precise, consistent, and high-throughput genetic modification of target cells in cellular therapy manufacturing applications. We optimized our device for delivery of mRNA into primary human T cells and demonstrated up to 95% transfection efficiency with minimum impact on cell viability and expansion potential. We additionally demonstrated processing of samples comprising up to 500 million T cells at a rate of 20 million cells/min. We anticipate that our device will help to streamline the production of autologous therapies requiring on the order of 10[Formula: see text]-10[Formula: see text] cells, and that it is well-suited to scale for production of trillions of cells to support emerging allogeneic therapies.
Keyphrases
- induced apoptosis
- high throughput
- cell cycle arrest
- single cell
- endothelial cells
- crispr cas
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- bone marrow
- sars cov
- machine learning
- signaling pathway
- drug delivery
- low dose
- gene expression
- risk assessment
- stem cell transplantation
- high dose
- human milk
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- platelet rich plasma