| Literature DB >> 30778344 |
José Manuel Marín Morales1, Nadine Münch1, Katja Peter1, Daniel Freund1, Uta Oelschlägel2, Kristina Hölig2, Thea Böhm3, Anne-Christine Flach3, Jörg Keßler3, Ezio Bonifacio4, Martin Bornhäuser2,5, Anke Fuchs1,2,4.
Abstract
Adoptive transfer of T regulatory cells (Treg) has been successfully exploited in the context of graft-versus-host disease, transplantation, and autoimmune disease. For the majority of applications, clinical administration of Treg requires laborious ex vivo expansion and typically involves open handling for culture feeds and repetitive sampling. Here we show results from our approach to translate manual Treg manufacturing to the fully closed automated CliniMACS Prodigy® system reducing contamination risk, hands-on time, and quality variation from human intervention. Polyclonal Treg were isolated from total nucleated cells obtained through leukapheresis of healthy donors by CD8+ cell depletion and subsequent CD25high enrichment. Treg were expanded with the CliniMACS Prodigy® device using clinical-grade cell culture medium, rapamycin, IL-2, and αCD3/αCD28 beads for 13-14 days. We successfully integrated expansion bead removal and final formulation into the automated procedure, finalizing the process with a ready to use product for bedside transfusion. Automated Treg expansion was conducted in parallel to an established manual manufacturing process using G-Rex cell culture flasks. We could prove similar expansion kinetics leading to a cell yield of up to 2.12 × 109 cells with the CliniMACS Prodigy® and comparable product phenotype of >90% CD4+CD25highCD127lowFOXP3+ cells that had similar in vitro immunosuppressive function. Efficiency of expansion bead depletion was comparable to the CliniMACS® Plus system and the final ready-to-infuse product had phenotype stability and high vitality after overnight storage. We anticipate this newly developed closed system expansion approach to be a starting point for the development of enhanced throughput clinical scale Treg manufacture, and for safe automated generation of antigen-specific Treg grafted with a chimeric antigen receptor (CAR Treg).Entities:
Keywords: CliniMACS Prodigy; Treg expansion; advanced therapy medicinal product; automation; closed system; regulatory T cells; treg cell therapy
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30778344 PMCID: PMC6369367 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2019.00038
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Quantification of CD4+CD25highCD127lowFOXP3+ Treg and other lymphocyte subsets before and after CD8−CD25high enrichment. (A) Phenotyping of initial cell source (leukapheresis), CD8+ depleted intermediate product and final CD25high Treg enriched fraction by flow cytometry. Shown are representative flow cytometry plots for one of the donors. (B) Relative percentage of Treg and contaminating CD4+CD25−/low (CD4 resting), effector memory CD4+CD25+CD127+CD45RO+ (CD4 Teff), CD8 cytotoxic T cells, B cells, NK cells and monocytes. Shown are individual and mean percentages (solid line) of CD45+ leukocytes of each subset for n = 8 Treg isolations. Error bars = SD.
Figure 2Growth curves and purity of automated closed-system vs. manually manufactured Treg. Clinical grade isolated Treg were cultured for 12–14 days in the CliniMACS Prodigy® or G-Rex10 culture devices with high dose IL-2, rapamycin, and ExpAct Treg expansion beads. (A) Expansion curves of four automated CliniMACS Prodigy® cultures during process development and optimization. (B) The optimized automated expansion process was compared to parallel manual G-Rex®10 culture starting with 1/10 of CliniMACS Prodigy® seeding cell number of the same isolated Treg pool. Bead restimulation and agitation modes are depicted. Results from 3 donors are shown. Numbers followed by x indicate fold expansion values. (C) Treg purity before and after manual or automated expansion culture. Treg phenotype was analyzed by flow cytometry as CD4+CD25highCD127lowFOXP3+. Shown is the percentage of Treg of all CD45+ for manually manufactured cultures (upper panel, n = 11,*p < 0.05) and manual vs. CliniMACS Prodigy® expanded cultures (lower panel, n = 4,*p < 0.05). Matching symbols indicate same starting material.
Development of expansion bead removal within the CliniMACS Prodigy® device.
Specifications and results of three distinct customized processes for ExpAct Treg bead removal on the CliniMACS Prodigy® system. Results are shown for three individual cultures. Culture C was split by partial harvest and bead depletion was performed on the CliniMACS® Plus device in parallel to bead depletion on the CliniMACS Prodigy® system (process III). Shown are cell yield and bead removal efficiency for both devices (bold frame).
Figure 3Suppressive capacity of manufactured Treg. Functionality of the final Treg products expanded by manual or automated culture was tested in a proliferation based suppression assay. (A) Percentage of proliferating T responder cells (Tresp) at different Treg:Tresp ratios. Each panel shows one donor. (B) Same data expressed as % of suppression and the estimate of the Treg:Tresp ratio required for 75% suppression. Error bars = SD.
Figure 4Stability of phenotype and vitality of the final cellular product. Three Treg products manufactured by automated culture were stored for 4 h in infusion solution (0.9%NaCl + 1% human albumin) at room temperature or overnight at 4°C. (A) Stability of Treg phenotype before and after storage as percentage of CD4+CD25highCD127lowFOXP3+ of CD45+. (B) Viability of cells determined by 7-AAD/AnnexinV staining. Shown are the percentages of viable non-apoptotic cells of total CD3+. Broken line indicates our release criteria value.