Non-viral precision T cell receptor replacement for personalized cell therapy

Susan P. Foy(San Francisco County Transportation Authority), Kyle Jacoby, Daniela A. Bota(University of California, Irvine), Theresa Hunter, Zheng Pan, Eric Stawiski, Yan Ma, William Lu, Songming Peng, Clifford L. Wang, Benjamin Yuen, Olivier Dalmas, Katharine Heeringa, Barbara Sennino, Andy Conroy, Michael T. Bethune, Ines Mende, William B. White, Monica Kukreja, Swetha Gunturu, Emily Humphrey, Adeel Hussaini, Duo An, Adam J. Litterman, Boi Quach, Alphonsus H. C. Ng(Institute for Systems Biology), Yue Lü(Institute for Systems Biology), Chad C. Smith, Katie M. Campbell(University of California, Los Angeles), Daniel Anaya, Lindsey Skrdlant, Eva Yi-Hsuan Huang, Ventura F. Mendoza, Jyoti Mathur, Luke Dengler, Bhamini Purandare, Robert Moot, Michael C Yi, Roel Funke, Alison Sibley, Todd Stallings-Schmitt, David Y. Oh(University of California, San Francisco), Bartosz Chmielowski(University of California, Los Angeles), Mehrdad Abedi(UC Davis Comprehensive Cancer Center), Yuan Yuan(City Of Hope National Medical Center), Jeffrey A. Sosman(Northwestern University), Sylvia M. Lee(Fred Hutch Cancer Center), Adam J. Schoenfeld(Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center), David Baltimore(California Institute of Technology), James R. Heath(Institute for Systems Biology), Alex Franzusoff, Antoni Ribas(University of California, Los Angeles), Arati V. Rao, Stefanie Mandl(Vifor Pharma (United States))
Nature
November 10, 2022
Cited by 271Open Access
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Abstract

. Here we developed a clinical-grade approach based on CRISPR-Cas9 non-viral precision genome-editing to simultaneously knockout the two endogenous TCR genes TRAC (which encodes TCRα) and TRBC (which encodes TCRβ). We also inserted into the TRAC locus two chains of a neoantigen-specific TCR (neoTCR) isolated from circulating T cells of patients. The neoTCRs were isolated using a personalized library of soluble predicted neoantigen-HLA capture reagents. Sixteen patients with different refractory solid cancers received up to three distinct neoTCR transgenic cell products. Each product expressed a patient-specific neoTCR and was administered in a cell-dose-escalation, first-in-human phase I clinical trial ( NCT03970382 ). One patient had grade 1 cytokine release syndrome and one patient had grade 3 encephalitis. All participants had the expected side effects from the lymphodepleting chemotherapy. Five patients had stable disease and the other eleven had disease progression as the best response on the therapy. neoTCR transgenic T cells were detected in tumour biopsy samples after infusion at frequencies higher than the native TCRs before infusion. This study demonstrates the feasibility of isolating and cloning multiple TCRs that recognize mutational neoantigens. Moreover, simultaneous knockout of the endogenous TCR and knock-in of neoTCRs using single-step, non-viral precision genome-editing are achieved. The manufacture of neoTCR engineered T cells at clinical grade, the safety of infusing up to three gene-edited neoTCR T cell products and the ability of the transgenic T cells to traffic to the tumours of patients are also demonstrated.


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