T cells expressing chimeric antigen receptor promote immune tolerance

A Pierini, BP Iliopoulou, H Peiris, M Pérez-Cruz… - JCI …, 2017 - pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
A Pierini, BP Iliopoulou, H Peiris, M Pérez-Cruz, J Baker, K Hsu, X Gu, PP Zheng, T Erkers…
JCI insight, 2017pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Cellular therapies based on permanent genetic modification of conventional T cells have
emerged as a promising strategy for cancer. However, it remains unknown if modification of
T cell subsets, such as Tregs, could be useful in other settings, such as allograft
transplantation. Here, we use a modular system based on a chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)
that binds covalently modified mAbs to control Treg activation in vivo. Transient expression
of this mAb-directed CAR (mAbCAR) in Tregs permitted Treg targeting to specific tissue sites …
Cellular therapies based on permanent genetic modification of conventional T cells have emerged as a promising strategy for cancer. However, it remains unknown if modification of T cell subsets, such as Tregs, could be useful in other settings, such as allograft transplantation. Here, we use a modular system based on a chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) that binds covalently modified mAbs to control Treg activation in vivo. Transient expression of this mAb-directed CAR (mAbCAR) in Tregs permitted Treg targeting to specific tissue sites and mitigated allograft responses, such as graft-versus-host disease. mAbCAR Tregs targeted to MHC class I proteins on allografts prolonged islet allograft survival and also prolonged the survival of secondary skin grafts specifically matched to the original islet allograft. Thus, transient genetic modification to produce mAbCAR T cells led to durable immune modulation, suggesting therapeutic targeting strategies for controlling alloreactivity in settings such as organ or tissue transplantation.
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