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CD7-deleted hematopoietic stem cells can restore immunity after CAR T cell therapy
Miriam Y. Kim, Matthew L. Cooper, Miriam T. Jacobs, Julie K. Ritchey, Julia Hollaway, Todd A. Fehniger, John F. DiPersio
Miriam Y. Kim, Matthew L. Cooper, Miriam T. Jacobs, Julie K. Ritchey, Julia Hollaway, Todd A. Fehniger, John F. DiPersio
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Research Article Immunology Oncology

CD7-deleted hematopoietic stem cells can restore immunity after CAR T cell therapy

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Abstract

Targeting T cell malignancies with universal CD7-targeting chimeric antigen receptor T cells (UCART7) can lead to profound immune deficiency due to loss of normal T and NK cells. While a small population of endogenous CD7– T cells exists, these cells are unlikely to be able to repopulate the entire immune repertoire after UCART7 treatment, as they are limited in number and proliferative capacity. To rescue T and NK cells after UCART7, we created hematopoietic stem cells genetically deleted for CD7 (CD7-KO HSCs). CD7-KO HSCs were able to engraft immunodeficient mice and differentiate into T and NK cells lacking CD7 expression. CD7-KO T and NK cells could perform effector functions as robustly as control T and NK cells. Furthermore, CD7-KO T cells were phenotypically and functionally distinct from endogenous CD7– T cells, indicating that CD7-KO T cells can supplement immune functions lacking in CD7– T cells. Mice engrafted with CD7-KO HSCs maintained T and NK cell numbers after UCART7 treatment, while these were significantly decreased in control mice. These studies support the development of CD7-KO HSCs to augment host immunity in patients with T cell malignancies after UCART7 treatment.

Authors

Miriam Y. Kim, Matthew L. Cooper, Miriam T. Jacobs, Julie K. Ritchey, Julia Hollaway, Todd A. Fehniger, John F. DiPersio

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Figure 4

CD7-KO T cells are phenotypically and functionally distinct from CD7– T cells.

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CD7-KO T cells are phenotypically and functionally distinct from CD7– T ...
(A) CD4 and CD8 expression on T cells generated from control or CD7-KO HSCs engrafted in NSGS mice (n = 22–24/group). (B) CD4 expression on CD7+ or CD7– T cells derived from control or CD7-KO HSCs (n = 15/group). (C) Naive cells (CCR7+CD45RO–) within the CD7+ and CD7– T cell fractions in control or CD7-KO T cells (n = 10/group). (D) Human T cells derived from control or CD7-KO HSCs were expanded in vitro with anti-CD3/CD28 beads (n = 6/group) (E) CD7 expression at baseline and 3 days after activation in control and CD7-KO T cells (n = 5/group). Statistical analyses were performed using unpaired 2-tailed Student’s t test (A and D) or paired Student’s t test (B and C). *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01.

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