Non-viral, specifically targeted CAR-T cells achieve high safety and efficacy in B-NHL

Jiqin Zhang(East China Normal University), Yongxian Hu(Zhejiang Chinese Medical University), Jiaxuan Yang(East China Normal University), Wei Li, Mingming Zhang(Zhejiang Chinese Medical University), Qingcan Wang, Linjie Zhang(East China Normal University), Guoqing Wei(Zhejiang Chinese Medical University), Yue Tian(East China Normal University), Kui Zhao(Zhejiang University), Ang Chen(East China Normal University), Binghe Tan(East China Normal University), Jiazhen Cui(Zhejiang Chinese Medical University), Deqi Li(New York University Shanghai), Yi Li(Zhejiang Chinese Medical University), Yalei Qi(East China Normal University), Dongrui Wang(Zhejiang Chinese Medical University), Yuxuan Wu(East China Normal University), Dali Li(New York University Shanghai), Bing Du(New York University Shanghai), Mingyao Liu(New York University Shanghai), He Huang(Zhejiang Chinese Medical University)
Nature
August 31, 2022
Cited by 347Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract Recently, chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-T cell therapy has shown great promise in treating haematological malignancies 1–7 . However, CAR-T cell therapy currently has several limitations 8–12 . Here we successfully developed a two-in-one approach to generate non-viral, gene-specific targeted CAR-T cells through CRISPR–Cas9. Using the optimized protocol, we demonstrated feasibility in a preclinical study by inserting an anti-CD19 CAR cassette into the AAVS1 safe-harbour locus. Furthermore, an innovative type of anti-CD19 CAR-T cell with PD1 integration was developed and showed superior ability to eradicate tumour cells in xenograft models. In adoptive therapy for relapsed/refractory aggressive B cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma (ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT04213469 ), we observed a high rate (87.5%) of complete remission and durable responses without serious adverse events in eight patients. Notably, these enhanced CAR-T cells were effective even at a low infusion dose and with a low percentage of CAR + cells. Single-cell analysis showed that the electroporation method resulted in a high percentage of memory T cells in infusion products, and PD1 interference enhanced anti-tumour immune functions, further validating the advantages of non-viral, PD1 -integrated CAR-T cells. Collectively, our results demonstrate the high safety and efficacy of non-viral, gene-specific integrated CAR-T cells, thus providing an innovative technology for CAR-T cell therapy.


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