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Harnessing features of adaptive NK cells to generate iPSC-derived NK cells for enhanced immunotherapy

Authors :
Svetlana Gaidarova
Hongbo Wang
Frank Cichocki
Jeffrey S. Miller
Bruce Walcheck
Brian Hancock
Miguel Meza
Ryan Bjordahl
Karrune Woan
Bruce R. Blazar
Bahram Valamehr
Janel Huffman
Melissa Khaw
Karl J. Malmberg
Ramzey Abujarour
Hansol Kim
Moyar Q. Ge
Bin Zhang
Thomas Dailey
John Goulding
Martin Felices
Cheng-Ying Wu
Tom Tong Lee
Yenan T. Bryceson
Greg Bonello
Laura Bendzick
Sajid Mahmood
Behiye Kodal
Zachary Davis
Paul Rogers
Katie Tuininga
Source :
Cell Stem Cell, 2062-2075.e5
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cell Press, 2021.

Abstract

Select subsets of immune effector cells have the greatest propensity to mediate antitumor responses. However, procuring these subsets is challenging, and cell-based immunotherapy is hampered by limited effector-cell persistence and lack of on-demand availability. To address these limitations, we generated a triple-gene-edited induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC). The clonal iPSC line was engineered to express a high affinity, non-cleavable version of the Fc receptor CD16a and a membrane-bound interleukin (IL)-15/IL-15R fusion protein. The third edit was a knockout of the ecto-enzyme CD38, which hydrolyzes NAD+. Natural killer (NK) cells derived from these uniformly engineered iPSCs, termed iADAPT, displayed metabolic features and gene expression profiles mirroring those of cytomegalovirus-induced adaptive NK cells. iADAPT NK cells persisted in vivo in the absence of exogenous cytokine and elicited superior antitumor activity. Our findings suggest that unique subsets of the immune system can be modeled through iPSC technology for effective treatment of patients with advanced cancer. acceptedVersion

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19345909
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cell Stem Cell, 2062-2075.e5
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6766136eac4f6f069666145ff5d870ee