| Literature DB >> 34058386 |
Tanja A Stief1, Theresa Kaeuferle1, Thomas R Müller2, Michaela Döring3, Lena M Jablonowski4, Kilian Schober2, Judith Feucht5, Kevin M Dennehy6, Semjon Willier4, Franziska Blaeschke7, Rupert Handgretinger3, Peter Lang3, Dirk H Busch2, Tobias Feuchtinger8.
Abstract
Viral infections cause life-threatening disease in immunocompromised patients and especially following transplantation. T cell receptor (TCR) engineering redirects specificity and can bring significant progress to emerging adoptive T cell transfer (ACT) approaches. T cell epitopes are well described, although knowledge is limited on which TCRs mediate protective immunity. In this study, refractory adenovirus (AdV) infection after hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) was treated with ACT of highly purified Hexon5-specific T cells using peptide major histocompatibility complex (pMHC)-Streptamers against the immunodominant human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-A∗0101-restricted peptide LTDLGQNLLY. AdV was successfully controlled through this oligoclonal ACT. Novel protective TCRs were isolated ex vivo and preclinically engineered into the TCR locus of allogeneic third-party primary T cells by CRISPR-Cas9-mediated orthotopic TCR replacement. Both TCR knockout and targeted integration of the new TCR in one single engineering step led to physiological expression of the transgenic TCR. Reprogrammed TCR-edited T cells showed strong virus-specific functionality such as cytokine release, effector marker upregulation, and proliferation capacity, as well as cytotoxicity against LTDLGQNLLY-presenting and AdV-infected targets. In conclusion, ex vivo isolated TCRs with clinical proven protection through ACT could be redirected into T cells from naive third-party donors. This approach ensures that transgenic TCRs are protective with potential off-the-shelf use and widened applicability of ACT to various refractory emerging viral infections. Published by Elsevier Inc.Entities:
Keywords: AdV-specific T cells; CRISPR/Cas9; adoptive T-cell transfer; homology-directed repair; orthotopic TCR replacement
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34058386 PMCID: PMC8753271 DOI: 10.1016/j.ymthe.2021.05.021
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Ther ISSN: 1525-0016 Impact factor: 11.454