Sather Blythe D, Romano Ibarra Guillermo S, Sommer Karen, Curinga Gabrielle, Hale Malika, Khan Iram F, Singh Swati, Song Yumei, Gwiazda Kamila, Sahni Jaya, Jarjour Jordan, Astrakhan Alexander, Wagner Thor A, Scharenberg Andrew M, Rawlings David J
Center for Immunity and Immunotherapies and Program for Cell and Gene Therapy, Seattle Children's Research Institute, Seattle, WA 98101, USA.
Bluebird Bio, Seattle, WA 98102, USA.
Sci Transl Med. 2015 Sep 30;7(307):307ra156. doi: 10.1126/scitranslmed.aac5530.
Genetic mutations or engineered nucleases that disrupt the HIV co-receptor CCR5 block HIV infection of CD4(+) T cells. These findings have motivated the engineering of CCR5-specific nucleases for application as HIV therapies. The efficacy of this approach relies on efficient biallelic disruption of CCR5, and the ability to efficiently target sequences that confer HIV resistance to the CCR5 locus has the potential to further improve clinical outcomes. We used RNA-based nuclease expression paired with adeno-associated virus (AAV)-mediated delivery of a CCR5-targeting donor template to achieve highly efficient targeted recombination in primary human T cells. This method consistently achieved 8 to 60% rates of homology-directed recombination into the CCR5 locus in T cells, with over 80% of cells modified with an MND-GFP expression cassette exhibiting biallelic modification. MND-GFP-modified T cells maintained a diverse repertoire and engrafted in immune-deficient mice as efficiently as unmodified cells. Using this method, we integrated sequences coding chimeric antigen receptors (CARs) into the CCR5 locus, and the resulting targeted CAR T cells exhibited antitumor or anti-HIV activity. Alternatively, we introduced the C46 HIV fusion inhibitor, generating T cell populations with high rates of biallelic CCR5 disruption paired with potential protection from HIV with CXCR4 co-receptor tropism. Finally, this protocol was applied to adult human mobilized CD34(+) cells, resulting in 15 to 20% homologous gene targeting. Our results demonstrate that high-efficiency targeted integration is feasible in primary human hematopoietic cells and highlight the potential of gene editing to engineer T cell products with myriad functional properties.
破坏HIV共受体CCR5的基因突变或工程核酸酶可阻断HIV对CD4(+) T细胞的感染。这些发现推动了用于HIV治疗的CCR5特异性核酸酶的工程化。这种方法的疗效依赖于CCR5的高效双等位基因破坏,而有效靶向赋予HIV对CCR5位点抗性的序列的能力有可能进一步改善临床结果。我们将基于RNA的核酸酶表达与腺相关病毒(AAV)介导的CCR5靶向供体模板递送相结合,以在原代人T细胞中实现高效的靶向重组。该方法在T细胞中持续实现了8%至60%的同源定向重组率进入CCR5位点,超过80%用MND-GFP表达盒修饰的细胞表现出双等位基因修饰。用MND-GFP修饰的T细胞保持了多样化的库,并与未修饰的细胞一样有效地植入免疫缺陷小鼠体内。使用这种方法,我们将编码嵌合抗原受体(CAR)的序列整合到CCR5位点,所得的靶向CAR T细胞表现出抗肿瘤或抗HIV活性。或者,我们引入了C46 HIV融合抑制剂,产生了双等位基因CCR5破坏率高且对具有CXCR4共受体嗜性的HIV有潜在保护作用的T细胞群体。最后,该方案应用于成人动员的CD34(+)细胞,导致15%至20%的同源基因靶向。我们的结果表明,高效靶向整合在原代人造血细胞中是可行的,并突出了基因编辑在工程化具有多种功能特性的T细胞产品方面的潜力。