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Cas9-induced targeted integration of large DNA payloads in primary human T cells via homology-mediated end-joining DNA repair.

Beau R WebberMatthew Joseph JohnsonJoseph G SkeateNicholas J SlipekWalker S LahrAnthony P DeFeoLauren J MillsXiaohong QiuBlaine RathmannMiechaleen D DiersBryce WickTom HenleyModassir ChoudhryTimothy K StarrR Scott McIvorBranden S Moriarity
Published in: Nature biomedical engineering (2023)
The reliance on viral vectors for the production of genetically engineered immune cells for adoptive cellular therapies remains a translational bottleneck. Here we report a method leveraging the DNA repair pathway homology-mediated end joining, as well as optimized reagent composition and delivery, for the Cas9-induced targeted integration of large DNA payloads into primary human T cells with low toxicity and at efficiencies nearing those of viral vectors (targeted knock-in of 1-6.7 kb payloads at rates of up to 70% at multiple targeted genomic loci and with cell viabilities of over 80%). We used the method to produce T cells with an engineered T-cell receptor or a chimaeric antigen receptor and show that the cells maintained low levels of exhaustion markers and excellent capacities for proliferation and cytokine production and that they elicited potent antitumour cytotoxicity in vitro and in mice. The method is readily adaptable to current good manufacturing practices and scale-up processes, and hence may be used as an alternative to viral vectors for the production of genetically engineered T cells for cancer immunotherapies.
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