| Literature DB >> 34453686 |
Alexander Biederstädt1,2, Katayoun Rezvani3.
Abstract
Over the past few years, cellular immunotherapy has emerged as a novel treatment option for certain forms of hematologic malignancies with multiple CAR-T therapies now routinely administered in the clinic. The limitations of generating an autologous cell product and the challenges of toxicity with CAR-T cells underscore the need to develop novel cell therapy products that are universal, safe, and potent. Natural killer (NK) cells are part of the innate immune system with unique advantages, including the potential for off-the-shelf therapy. A recent first-in-human trial of CD19-CAR-NK infusion in patients with relapsed/refractory lymphoid malignancies proved safe with promising clinical activity. Building on these encouraging clinical responses, research is now actively exploring ways to further enhance CAR-NK cell potency by prolonging in vivo persistence and overcoming mechanisms of functional exhaustion. Besides these strategies to modulate CAR-NK cell intrinsic properties, there are increasing efforts to translate the successes seen in hematologic malignancies to the solid tumor space. This review will provide an overview on current trends and evolving concepts to genetically engineer the next generation of CAR-NK therapies. Emphasis will be placed on innovative multiplexed engineering approaches including CRISPR/Cas9 to overcome CAR-NK functional exhaustion and reprogram immune cell metabolism for enhanced potency.Entities:
Keywords: Cellular immunotherapy; Chimeric antigen receptor; Genetic engineering; Metabolic reprogramming; Natural killer cells
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34453686 PMCID: PMC8397867 DOI: 10.1007/s12185-021-03209-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Hematol ISSN: 0925-5710 Impact factor: 2.490
Overview of current phase 1/2 trials evaluating CAR-NK immunotherapy
| Antigen target | Disease focus | Construct design | NK cell origin | Identifier | Sponsor | Location | First posted | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CD19 | R/R B-ALL | CAR.19-41BB-CD3ζ | Haplo-identical donor | NCT00995137 | St Jude Children's Research Hospital, Memphis, TN | USA | 2009 | Completed; no updates reported since 2017 |
| CD19 | R/R B-NHL | CAR.19-41BB-CD3ζ | Haplo-identical donor | NCT01974479 | National University Health System | Singapore | 2013 | Suspended for interim review |
| CD33 | R/R AML | CAR.33-CD28-4-1BB-CD3ζ | NK-92 cell line | NCT02944162 | PersonGen BioTherapeutics | China | 2016 | Unknown, candidate not listed on sponsor website |
| CD7 | CD7+ R/R leukemia/ lymphoma | CAR.7-CD28-4-1BB-CD3ζ | NK-92 cell line | NCT02742727 | PersonGen BioTherapeutics | China | 2016 | Unknown, candidate not listed on sponsor website |
| CD19 | R/R CD19+ lymphoid malignancies | CAR.19-CD28-41BB-CD3ζ | NK-92 cell line | NCT02892695 | PersonGen BioTherapeutics | China | 2016 | Unknown, candidate not listed on sponsor website |
| Muc1 | Advanced solid tumors | Undisclosed | Undisclosed | NCT02839954 | PersonGen BioTherapeutics | China | 2016 | Unknown, candidate not listed on sponsor website |
| CD19 | R/R ALL, R/R CLL, R/R B-NHL | CAR.CD19-CD28-CD3ζ.iCasp9-IL15 | Cord blood | NCT03056339 | MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX | USA | 2017 | Phase 1 portion completed; Phase 2 recruiting |
| HER2 | HER2+ recurrent glioblastoma | CAR.HER2. CD28.CD3ζ | NK-92 cell line | NCT03383978 | Johann Wolfgang Goethe University Hospital | Germany | 2017 | Recruiting |
| PSMA | Castrate-resistant prostate cancer | Undisclosed | iPSC | NCT03692663 | Allife Medical Science and Technology | China | 2018 | Not yet recruiting |
| Mesothelin | Ovarian cancer | Undisclosed | iPSC | NCT03692637 | Allife Medical Science and Technology | China | 2018 | Not yet recruiting |
| NKG2D ligands | Advanced solid tumors | Undisclosed | Autologous + allogeneic NK cells not further specified | NCT03415100 | The Third Affiliated Hospital of Guangzhou Medical University | China | 2018 | Unknown |
| CD22 | R/R B-NHL | Undisclosed | iPSC | NCT03692767 | Allife Medical Science and Technology | China | 2018 | Unknown |
| BCMA | R/R B-NHL | Undisclosed | iPSC | NCT03559764 | Allife Medical Science and Technology | China | 2018 | Unknown |
| BCMA | R/R Multiple myeloma | Undisclosed | NK-92 cell line | NCT03940833 | Asclepius Technology Company Group | China | 2019 | Recruiting |
| CD20 (CD16a + Rituximab) | R/R AML/B-NHL | hnCD16; full construct undisclosed | iPSC | NCT04023071 | Fate Therapeutics | USA | 2019 | Recruiting |
| ROBO1 | Advanced solid tumors; pancreatic cancer | Undisclosed | Undisclosed | NCT03940820; NCT03931720; NCT03941457 | Asclepius Technology Company Group | China | 2019 | Recruiting |
| CD19/CD22 | R/R B-NHL | Undisclosed | iPSC | NCT03824964 | Allife Medical Science and Technology | China | 2019 | Unknown |
| CD19 | R/R B-NHL | Undisclosed | iPSC | NCT03824951; NCT03690310 | Allife Medical Science and Technology | China | 2019 | Unknown |
| NKG2D ligands | R/R AML/MDS | CAR.NKG2D-OX40-CD3ζ | Donor-derived | NCT04623944 | Nkarta | USA | 2020 | Recruiting |
| CD19 (± Rituximab or Obinutuzumab) | R/R B-NHL | CAR.19-NKG2D-2B4-CD3ζ-IL15RF-hnCD16 | iPSC | NCT04245722 | Fate Therapeutics | USA | 2020 | Recruiting |
| CD276 (CD16a + Enoblituzumab) | Ovarian cancer | hnCD16; full construct undisclosed | iPSC | NCT04630769 | Fate Therapeutics | USA | 2020 | Recruiting |
| PD-L1 (CD16a + Avelumab) | Advanced solid tumors | hnCD16; full construct undisclosed | iPSC | NCT04551885 | Fate Therapeutics | USA | 2020 | Recruiting |
| CD38/SLAMF7 (CD16a + Daratumumab/ Elotuzumab) | R/R Multiple myeloma/AML | hnCD16A-Il-15RF-CD38-/-; full construct undisclosed | iPSC | NCT04614636 | Fate Therapeutics | USA | 2020 | Recruiting |
| BCMA (± daratumumab) | R/R Multiple myeloma | Undisclosed | iPSC | Fate Therapeutics | USA | IND application allowed | ||
| NKG2D ligands; SARS-CoV-2 S protein | COVID-19 | Cord blood | CAR.NKG2D-ACE2-GM-CSF.IL15; full construct undisclosed | NCT04324996 | Chongqing Public Health Medical Center | China | 2020 | Recruiting |
| CD19 | R/R B-NHL | Undisclosed | Undisclosed | NCT04639739 | Xinqiao Hospital of Chongqing | China | 2020 | Not yet recruiting |
| PD-L1; PD-1 (CD16a + Pembrolizumab) | Gastro-esophageal junction (GEJ) Cancer; Advanced HNSCC | CAR.PD-L1-FcεRIγ; full construct undisclosed | haNK cell line (NK-92 cell line engineered to express high-affinity CD16 and endoplasmic reticulum-retained IL-2) | NCT04847466 | National Cancer Institute | USA | 2021 | Not yet recruiting |
| CD19 | R/R B-NHL | Undisclosed | Haplo-identical donor | NCT04887012 | Second Affiliated Hospital, School of Medicine, Zhejiang University | China | 2021 | Recruiting |
| CD19 | R/R B-NHL | Cord blood | CAR.19.IL15; full construct undisclosed | NCT04796675 | Wuhan Union Hospital | China | 2021 | Recruiting |
ALL, acute lymphoblastic leukemia; AML, acute myeloid leukemia; BCMA, B-cell maturation antigen; CAR, chimeric antigen receptor; CD38, CD38 knock-out; CLL, chronic lymphocytic leukemia; DLBCL, diffuse large B-cell lymphoma; GEJ, gastroesophageal junction cancer; hnCD16, high-affinity, non-cleavable CD16; HNSCC, head and neck squamous cell carcinoma; IL15RF, IL15 receptor fusion; iPSC, induced pluripotent stem cell; NHL, non-Hodgkin lymphoma; PD-1, programmed cell death protein 1; PD-L1, programmed death-ligand 1; PSMA, prostate specific membrane antigen; R/R, relapsed or refractory; SARS-CoV-2, severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2
Fig. 1Evolution of CAR construct design. (1) First generation CAR molecules contain a synthetic extracellular receptor for target antigen recognition, a transmembrane domain and one intracellular signaling domain. (2,3) Second and third generation CAR constructs are endowed with one or more intracellular co-stimulatory domains for augmented signaling. (4) Fourth generation constructs, dubbed armored CARs, contain molecular payloads which endow CAR-engineered cells with additional features and functionality. (5) Multi-specific targeting refers to genetic engineering strategies which aim to simultaneously target multiple tumor antigens. (6) Logic-gated CAR molecules are engineered to express both an activating (aCAR) and inhibitory (iCAR) CAR receptor on their surface. The former recognizes tumor-specific epitopes and is able to initiate immune cell activation and target engagement. The latter detects epitopes exclusively present on healthy tissues and inhibits immune cell activation. By integrating both signals, logic-gated CAR-modified NK cells can differentially kill tumor cells while sparing healthy tissues with shared antigens. (7) Bispecific Killer engagers (BiKes) are bispecific antibodies with binding sites for both FcRγIII (CD16A) and a tumor-specific epitope. Acting as a molecular glue, BiKes can bind and bring NK cells in close proximity of tumor cells for specific target elimination in a CAR-like manner. aCAR, activating chimeric antigen receptor; GzmB, granzyme B; HSC, hematopoietic stem cell; iCAR, inhibitory chimeric antigen receptor; IFNγ, interferon gamma; Il-15, interleukin 15; mAb, monoclonal antibody; PFN, perforin; T-NHL, T non-Hodgkin lymphoma; TNFα, tumor-necrosis factor alpha. Image created in BioRender
Fig. 2Multiplexed engineering strategies for building the next-generation of CAR-NK immunotherapy. (1) Ectopic expression of chemokine receptors enhances NK trafficking and infiltration into tumor beds. (2) Genetic disruption of negative regulators of NK immune function can help overcome functional exhaustion. (3) Neutralizing scFvs can intercept extracellular GM-CSF which has been linked to CRS/ICANS. (4) Cytokine pre-conditioning using Il-12/15/18 induces formation of memory-like NK cells with enhanced potency. (5) Knock-out of both surface and intracellular molecules conditions NK cells for combination therapies by preventing fratricide (CD38 KO) or immunosuppression (GR KO). (6) Metabolic reprogramming aims to render NK cells resistant to mechanisms of functional exhaustion by intervening in metabolic pathways. (7) Targeted genetic ablation of inhibitory receptors can safeguard CAR-NK cells against the immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment. A2AR, adenosine A2A receptor; CRS, cytokine release syndrome; GM-CSF, granulocyte macrophage colony stimulating factor; GR, glucocorticoid receptor; ICANS, immune cell-associated neurotoxicity syndrome; Il-10/12/15/18, interleukin 10/12/15/18; IDO, indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase; PGE2, prostaglandin E2; scFv, single-chain variable fragment; TGFβ, transforming-factor beta; TGFBR2, transforming-factor beta receptor 2. Image created in BioRender