| Literature DB >> 30381459 |
Tia DiTommaso1, Julie M Cole2, Luke Cassereau2, Joshua A Buggé2, Jacquelyn L Sikora Hanson2, Devin T Bridgen2, Brittany D Stokes2, Scott M Loughhead2, Bruce A Beutel2, Jonathan B Gilbert2, Kathrin Nussbaum3, Antonio Sorrentino3, Janine Toggweiler3, Tobias Schmidt3, Gabor Gyuelveszi3, Howard Bernstein2, Armon Sharei2.
Abstract
The translational potential of cell-based therapies is often limited by complications related to effectively engineering and manufacturing functional cells. While the use of electroporation is widespread, the impact of electroporation on cell state and function has yet to be fully characterized. Here, we use a genome-wide approach to study optimized electroporation treatment and identify striking disruptions in the expression profiles of key functional transcripts of human T cells. These genetic disruptions result in concomitant perturbation of cytokine secretion including a 648-fold increase in IL-2 secretion (P < 0.01) and a 30-fold increase in IFN-γ secretion (P < 0.05). Ultimately, the effects at the transcript and protein level resulted in functional deficiencies in vivo, with electroporated T cells failing to demonstrate sustained antigen-specific effector responses when subjected to immunological challenge. In contrast, cells subjected to a mechanical membrane disruption-based delivery mechanism, cell squeezing, had minimal aberrant transcriptional responses [0% of filtered genes misregulated, false discovery rate (FDR) q < 0.1] relative to electroporation (17% of genes misregulated, FDR q < 0.1) and showed undiminished effector responses, homing capabilities, and therapeutic potential in vivo. In a direct comparison of functionality, T cells edited for PD-1 via electroporation failed to distinguish from untreated controls in a therapeutic tumor model, while T cells edited with similar efficiency via cell squeezing demonstrated the expected tumor-killing advantage. This work demonstrates that the delivery mechanism used to insert biomolecules affects functionality and warrants further study.Entities:
Keywords: T cell engineering; cell therapy; intracellular delivery; microfluidics
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Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30381459 PMCID: PMC6243275 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1809671115
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205
Fig. 1.Comparison of intracellular delivery methods reveals delivery-mediated effects on gene expression and cytokine secretion in unstimulated human T cells. Screening electroporation programs (black) and cell-squeezing pressures (blue) reveal the impact of delivery protocol on (A) viability and (B and C) delivery. Delivery is represented as the total percent of cells (B) that received cargo (dextran) and the amount of cargo (C) that each cell received on a per-cell basis relative to untreated control (rel MFI). The conditions used for downstream editing and functional studies are underlined (electroporation program FI-115 and squeeze pressure 105 psi). (D) Graphical schematic detailing the workflow for the comparative editing studies. SQZ, squeeze; EP, electroporation. (E) T7E1 assay reveals gene editing efficiencies for squeeze and electroporation across three human donors. qPCR reveals Ifnγ (F) and Il-2 (G) transcript levels in human T cells after electroporation ± RNP compared with untreated cells (n = 3 human donors). (H) PCA was performed across all T cell samples and all genes at the 6-h timepoint to generate a plot of PC1 (treatment variability) versus PC2 (donor variability). (I) Volcano plots show the fold change and P value of individual genes 6 h after electroporation (Left) and squeezing (Right) compared with controls (n = 3). The red boxes highlight genes with greater than twofold change and P value < 0.05 that were used in the (J) heat map and (K) pathway analysis (only pathways with a z-activation score >2 in either direction are shown). (L) Protein level validation of the array was done using cytokine secretion assays 24 h posttreatment (**P < 0.01; *P < 0.05).
FDR q-value thresholds for pairwise comparisons in unstimulated T cells
| 6 h | 24 h | |||
| q threshold | Electroporation vs. control | Squeeze vs. control | Electroporation vs. control | Squeeze vs. control |
| 0.25 | 8,141 | 2,211 | 3,309 | 0 |
| 0.1 | 4,072 | 0 | 7 | 0 |
| 0.05 | 330 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
Fig. 2.Intracellular delivery methods impact in vitro and in vivo functionality. (A) In vitro colony-forming assays compare the potential of electroporated and squeezed human CD34+ HSCs to differentiate into colony-forming unit granulocyte–macrophage (CFU-GM) and burst-forming unit erythroid (BFU-E) colonies over the course of 2 wk. (B) Viability of murine T cells after squeeze and electroporation is shown. (C and D) Representative percentage of CD3+ murine T cells that exhibit PD-1 or CD69 activation after squeeze, electroporation, or no treatment (control) over time is shown. (E) A schematic detailing the experimental approach to assess delivery-mediated effects on T cell activation is shown. (F and G) After T cell rechallenge with OVA on day 4, CD45.2+/CD8+/IFN-γ+ T cells were intracellularly stained for IFN-γ (***P ≤ 0.001; *P < 0.05).
Fig. 3.Squeeze-edited T cells demonstrate efficacy in the tumor setting. (A) ICS results show the percent of IFN-γ–positive cells (Left) and rMFI of IFN-γ (Right) in squeeze-edited and control murine OT-I T cells when cocultured with B16-OVA tumor cells. (B) A subset of edited OT-I T cells were cultured ex vivo to determine the input editing efficiency for both squeeze and electroporation in the tumor study. (C) Tumor growth measurements compare therapeutic administration of untreated wild-type OT-I T cells (naïve) to wild-type OT-I T cells treated with squeeze or electroporation, and squeeze-edited or electroporation-edited OT-I T cells (n = 5 animals per group; **P < 0.01; *P < 0.05; comparisons were done relative to the naïve group). (D) TIL analysis quantifying percent of CD8+ CD45.2+ cells that have infiltrated the tumor is shown. (E) TIL analysis was done to quantify the percent PD-1+, CD45.2+, CD8+, OVA Tetramer+ cells infiltrating the tumor.