학술논문

Mitigation of chromosome loss in clinical CRISPR-Cas9-engineered T cells
Document Type
article
Source
Cell. 186(21)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Immunology
Genetics
Clinical Research
Gene Therapy
Biotechnology
Bioengineering
5.2 Cellular and gene therapies
5.1 Pharmaceuticals
Generic health relevance
Cancer
Humans
Chromosomes
CRISPR-Cas Systems
DNA Damage
Gene Editing
T-Lymphocytes
Clinical Trials as Topic
Chromosome Aberrations
CAR T cells
CRISPR screen
CRISPR-Cas9
DNA repair
T cells
aneuploidy
chromosome loss
clinical trial
genome editing
immunoengineering
genome editing:
CAR T cells
Biological Sciences
Medical and Health Sciences
Developmental Biology
Biological sciences
Biomedical and clinical sciences
Language
Abstract
CRISPR-Cas9 genome editing has enabled advanced T cell therapies, but occasional loss of the targeted chromosome remains a safety concern. To investigate whether Cas9-induced chromosome loss is a universal phenomenon and evaluate its clinical significance, we conducted a systematic analysis in primary human T cells. Arrayed and pooled CRISPR screens revealed that chromosome loss was generalizable across the genome and resulted in partial and entire loss of the targeted chromosome, including in preclinical chimeric antigen receptor T cells. T cells with chromosome loss persisted for weeks in culture, implying the potential to interfere with clinical use. A modified cell manufacturing process, employed in our first-in-human clinical trial of Cas9-engineered T cells (NCT03399448), reduced chromosome loss while largely preserving genome editing efficacy. Expression of p53 correlated with protection from chromosome loss observed in this protocol, suggesting both a mechanism and strategy for T cell engineering that mitigates this genotoxicity in the clinic.