| Literature DB >> 33324420 |
Muhammad Sadeqi Nezhad1,2, Alexander Seifalian3, Nader Bagheri4, Sajad Yaghoubi5, Mohammad Hossein Karimi6, Meghdad Adbollahpour-Alitappeh7.
Abstract
Despite significant breakthroughs in understanding of immunological and physiological features of autoimmune diseases, there is currently no specific therapeutic option with prolonged remission. Cell-based therapy using engineered-T cells has attracted tremendous attention as a practical treatment for autoimmune diseases. Genetically modified-T cells armed with chimeric antigen receptors (CARs) attack autoreactive immune cells such as B cells or antibody-secreting plasma cells. CARs can further guide the effector and regulatory T cells (Tregs) to the autoimmune milieu to traffic, proliferate, and exert suppressive functions. The genetically modified-T cells with artificial receptors are a promising option to suppress autoimmune manifestation and autoinflammatory events. Interestingly, CAR-T cells are modified to a new chimeric auto-antibody receptor T (CAAR-T) cell. This cell, with its specific-antigen, recognizes and binds to the target autoantibodies expressing autoreactive cells and, subsequently, destroy them. Preclinical studies of CAR-T cells demonstrated satisfactory outcomes against autoimmune diseases. However, the lack of target autoantigens remains one of the pivotal problems in the field of CAR-T cells. CAR-based therapy has to pass several hurdles, including stability, durability, trafficking, safety, effectiveness, manufacturing, and persistence, to enter clinical use. The primary goal of this review was to shed light on CAR-T immunotherapy, CAAR-T cell therapy, and CAR-Treg cell therapy in patients with immune system diseases.Entities:
Keywords: CAAR-Tregs; CAR-T cells; Tregs; adoptive cell therapy; autoimmune diseases; cytotoxic T cells; immunotherapy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33324420 PMCID: PMC7727445 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2020.603237
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1A common CAR construction. (A): CAR is comprised of antigen-recognition domain (scFv), a hinge domain or spacer (CD28, CD8α, CD7, IgG4, and IgG1), a transmembrane domain (CD28, CD8α, CD7, CD4, CD3z, and OX40), a co-stimulatory domain (CD244, CD28, CD27, OX40, ICOS, and CD137), and a signaling domain (CD3z, DAP10, and DAP12). (B): The process of CAR-T manufacturing from peripheral blood mononuclear cells to genetically modified-T cells and administration. CAR-T therapy starts with accumulating the patient’s white blood cells by leukapheresis. The apheresis products are enriched or deleted for a specific cell subset and then activated by one of following methods, including interleukins (IL-2, IL-7, and IL-15), anti-CD3/CD28 antibody-coated magnetic beads, soluble CD3 antibody, artificial antigen-presenting cells, plate-bound antibodies, and adhesion molecules. The activated T cells are introduced with the CAR transgene through lentiviral or retroviral and non-viral methods (electroporation of naked DNA and plasmid-based transposon/transposase). Afterwards, the engineered-T cells undergo an expansion process in static culture bags or dynamic culture vessels or rotating bioreactors. Eventually, cell numbers are calculated based on the patient’s disease burden, weight, and another formulation. The CAR modified-T cells transfer to either a container for infusion purposes or cryopreserved for storage.
CAR-Treg-based therapy in preclinical models of autoimmune diseases.
| Condition | Target antigen | CAR-construct | Delivery route | Preclinical study | Dosage of CAR-Tregs | Overall outcomes | Year [Ref] |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Insulin | CAR-Treg cells (insulin scFv, CD28, CD3ζ) | Retroviral | BALB/cJ, C57BL/6J, and non-obese diabetic (NOD/LtJ) mic | 25×105 | The study showed successful treatment of CAR-Tregs without affecting the general immune competence of the recipient. | 2019 ( |
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| Carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) | CEA CAR-Tregs (SCA431 scFv, CD28, CD3ζ) | Retroviral | CEABAC-2 and CEABAC-mice (n=10) | 15–30 × 105 | In general, CAR-Tregs were successfully tested in two distinct complementary model systems, indicating the viability of CAR-Treg-based treatment. | 2014 ( |
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| Myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein | MOG CAR-Tregs (MOG scFv, CD28, CD3ζ | Lentiviral | Female C57BL/6 mice | 1 × 105 | CAR-Tregs targeting myelin localized to the CNS efficiently suppressed ongoing inflammation and alleviated disease symptoms. | 2012 ( |
Figure 2The mechanism of action of CAAR-T cells and CAR-Treg cells against autoimmune disease. (A): MOG CAR-Treg cells effectively bind and is localized to the MOG+ oligodendrocytes in CNS and exert their immunosuppressive manner to protect myelin against immune attack. (B): (a); T cell expressing CAAR specific for B cell receptors targets aberrant B cells. (b); further, it inhibits B cell development from secreting autoreactive antibodies and prevents B cells from presenting autoantigens to autoreactive T cells, which leads to suppression of T cell-mediated autoimmune diseases.
CAR-T-based therapy in preclinical models of autoimmune diseases.
| Condition | Target antigen | CAR-construct | Delivery Route | Preclinical Study | Dosage of CAR-T cells | Overall Outcomes | Year [Ref] |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| I-Ag7-B:9–23(R3) complex | CD8+ CAR-T cells. (mAb287 scFv,4-1BB, CD28, CD3ζ) | Retroviral | Female NOD/LtJ, Thy1.1 NOD, and NOD.SCID mice | 5 ×106 | CAR-T cells can selectively target pathogenic MHC class II: peptide complex relevant to an autoimmune disorder. The study only delayed type 1 diabetes mice and did not prevent the development of T1D. | 2019 ( |
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| Keratinocyte adhesion protein Dsg3 | Dsg3 CAAR-T (Dsg3, CD137-CD3ζ) | NA | Mice bearing human skin xenografts, NSG (NOD-scid-gamma) immunodeficient mouse | NA | CAAR-T cells demonstrated a targeted-based therapy against antibody-mediated autoimmune diseases with the potential generation of long-term memory. | 2016 ( |
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| CD19 | CD19 CAR-T cells (CD19 scFv, CD28 and two intracellular signaling domains, CD28, CD3ζ | Retroviral | Female NZB/W or MRL-lpr mice | 1.2×106 | CD19+ B cells depletion led to inhibition of auto-antibody production, and mitigated the manifestations of lupus pathogenesis, and increased the lifespans of mice | 2019 ( |