| Literature DB >> 30937303 |
Fabio Caliendo1, Marina Dukhinova1, Velia Siciliano1,2.
Abstract
Synthetic Biology has enabled new approaches to several medical applications including the development of immunotherapies based on bioengineered cells, and most notably the engineering of T-cells with tumor-targeting receptors, the Chimeric Antigen Receptor (CAR)-T cells. CAR-T-cells have successfully treated blood tumors such as large B-cell lymphoma and promise a new scenario of therapeutic interventions also for solid tumors. Learning the lesson from CAR-T cells, we can foster the reprogramming of T lymphocytes with enhanced survival and functional activity in depressing tumor microenvironment, or to challenge diseases such as infections, autoimmune and chronic inflammatory disorders. This review will focus on the most updated bioengineering approaches to increase control, and safety of T-cell activity and to immunomodulate the extracellular microenvironment to augment immune responses. We will also discuss on applications beyond cancer treatment with implications toward the understanding and cure of a broader range of diseases by means of mammalian cells engineering.Entities:
Keywords: T cell engineering; engineered cell-based therapy; immunology; synthetic biology; synthetic immunology
Year: 2019 PMID: 30937303 PMCID: PMC6431652 DOI: 10.3389/fbioe.2019.00043
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Bioeng Biotechnol ISSN: 2296-4185
Figure 1Adoptive T-cell therapy and chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) design. (A) T-cells are isolated from the blood and genetically modified to express a cancer-targeting receptor. Engineered T cells are then expanded and transfused back into the patient. (B) The current CAR design comprises an extracellular recognition domain (a single chain fragment antibody-scFv for binding to the antigen) a transmembrane domain needed to anchor the receptor to the cell membrane, an activation domain (CD3ζ chain) and a costimulatory domain (commonly CD28 and 4-1BB). (C) Synthetic devices to improve specificity of CAR-T-cell activity. The sCAR system includes a switchable CAR (sCAR) and a Fab fragment fused to a yeast-derived peptide neo-epitope (PNE_tag). The Fab domain of the Fab-PNE module recognizes a tumor-associated antigen (TAA) whereas the sCAR specifically binds the PNE domain of the switch. This interaction activates sCAR-T cells against tumor cells. SUPRA-CAR is a two-component system consisting of a universal domain CARs expressing a leucin zipper extracellular domain (zipCAR) and a tumor-targeting scFv adapator (zipFv). The scFv of zipFv recognize the TAA while the zip binds the leucine zipper on the zipCAR acting as a switch. Also here it creates an immunological synapse that drives T-cell activation. iCAR consists of two incomplete CAR molecules that heterodimerize in presence of a small molecule which functions as a switch to activate T-cell response. SynNotch receptor comprises a scFv extracellular domain that recognizes the antigen, fused to a cleavable intracellular domain that retain a transcription factor (TF) to the membrane. The antigen recognition induces the cleavage of TF that translocate into the nucleus to activate output transcription. SynNotch/CAR AND-gate circuit to trigger activation when two distinct antigens are expressed on the target cell. SynNotch receptor activated by antigen “A” drives the expression of a CAR molecule which targets antigen “B.” Interaction with antigen B leads to T-cell activation. ZASE is a dual-gated ZAP70 protein switch, obtained by fusing Zap70 to the ligand-binding domain of the estrogen receptor ERt2. Two distinct small molecules, 4OHT (green circle) and 3-MB-PP1 (red triangle) turn, respectively ON and OFF protein activity.
Figure 2Synthetic biology devices for immunomodulation of the extracellular environment in response to intracellular protein biomarkers. (A) AND gate circuit activated by tumor-specific transcription factors TF-1 and TF-2. TF-1 regulates the transcription of GAD transcription factor which in turn activate the production of SCIP (cell surface antigen EST, CCL21 chemokine, IL-12, and anti-PD1 antibody). The open reading frame of GAD is divided in two exons and an intron processed into a miRNA that inhibits the GAD-encoding mRNA (negative auto-regulatory feedback). TF-2 promotes the expression of a miRNA-sponge sequesters miRNA-x allowing the expression of GAD. Therefore, both TF-1 and TF-2 are required to exert immunomodulatory regulation. (B) Intrabody-based device for activation of transcriptional programs in presence of a target protein. Cytosolic proteins are identified by two intracellular antibodies, one membrane-tethered and fused to a transcription factor (TF) via a TEV protease cleavage site, and the other fused to the viral TEV protease. The presence of the target protein and subsequent binding of the two intrabodies results in TEVp cleavage of TCS and release of TF, converting protein detection into transcriptional output. The system was used to engineer CD4+ T-cells to release XCL-1 chemokine upon detection of the HIV-1 NEF protein.