Development of a Fully Non-Viral 1XX-enhanced BCMA CAR-T Cell Therapy for Multiple Myeloma

Alexis Talbot(Gladstone Institutes), K Li(Gladstone Institutes), Jae Hyun J. Lee(Gladstone Institutes), Shanshan Lang(Gladstone Institutes), Chang Liu(Gladstone Institutes), Nechama Kalter(Bar-Ilan University), Zhongmei Li(University of California, San Francisco), Yasaman Mortazavi(Gladstone Institutes), Niran Almudhfar(Gladstone Institutes), Joseph J. Muldoon(Gladstone Institutes), Vincent Allain(Gladstone Institutes), William Nyberg(Gladstone Institutes), Jing-Yi J. Chung(Gladstone Institutes), Charlotte Wang(Gladstone Institutes), Zhongxia Qi(University of California, San Francisco), Netravathi Krishnappa(Innovative Genomics Institute), Alvin Ha(University of California, San Francisco), Dehui Kong(University of California, San Francisco), Derrick Houser(University of California, San Francisco), Sreenivasan Paruthiyil(University of California, San Francisco), Moloud Ahmadi(Thermo Fisher Scientific (United States)), Yongchang Ji(Thermo Fisher Scientific (United States)), Michael Rosenberg(Bar-Ilan University), Luis A. Acevedo(University of California, San Francisco), Brianna Liang(University of California, San Francisco), Kevin Briseno(University of California, San Francisco), Serena S. Kwek(University of California, San Francisco), Petros Giannikopoulos(Gladstone Institutes), Isabelle Rivière(Gladstone Institutes), Michel Sadelain(Gladstone Institutes), David Y. Oh(University of California, San Francisco), Alexander Marson(University of California, San Francisco), Ayal Hendel(Gladstone Institutes), Thomas Martin(Bar-Ilan University), Justin Eyquem(University of California, San Francisco), Brian R. Shy(Gladstone Institutes), Brian R. Shy(Gladstone Institutes)
bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)
April 22, 2026
Cited by 0Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract Multiple myeloma (MM) is a clonal plasma cell malignancy characterized by bone marrow infiltration, monoclonal immunoglobulin production, and microenvironmental dysregulation that leads to systemic organ damage. The advent of B-cell maturation antigen (BCMA)-directed chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy has induced unprecedented responses and durability for patients with relapsed/refractory MM. These outcomes are rarely observed with prior salvage strategies, although relapse remains the predominant long-term challenge for most patients. The two currently approved BCMA CAR-T cell products use viral vectors to semi-randomly insert the CAR gene, which results in heterogeneous genomic composition and variability in efficacy, safety, and product consistency. To address these challenges, we integrated targeted CRISPR genome engineering with precise CAR transgene insertion at the T-cell receptor alpha constant ( TRAC ) locus, 1XX CAR signaling architecture to enhance potency and durability, and non-viral manufacturing with a single-stranded DNA repair template to improve efficiency and yield. This approach confers physiological CAR expression, reduces insertional mutagenesis, and improves persistence by mitigating tonic signaling and exhaustion. Our GMP manufacturing process consistently achieved high CAR integration (37.7–72.7%) and yields across all full-scale runs and met predefined release criteria for identity, purity, safety, and quality. In NSG mouse models of MM, the UCCT-BCMA-1 product exhibited exceptionally potent tumor control, CAR-T cell expansion 100–1000-fold greater than that of lentiviral constructs, and durable clearance of myeloma cells after multiple rechallenges. These findings establish a CRISPR-edited, fully non-viral manufacturing platform for next-generation 1XX-BCMA CAR-T therapies with enhanced persistence, safety, and efficacy. One Sentence Summary CRISPR-engineered, TRAC -targeted 1XX-BCMA CAR-T therapy with improved safety, potency, and persistence in relapsed and refractory multiple myeloma.


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