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Genetic Inactivation of CD33 in Hematopoietic Stem Cells to Enable CAR T Cell Immunotherapy for Acute Myeloid Leukemia.

Cell (2018-06-02)
Miriam Y Kim, Kyung-Rok Yu, Saad S Kenderian, Marco Ruella, Shirley Chen, Tae-Hoon Shin, Aisha A Aljanahi, Daniel Schreeder, Michael Klichinsky, Olga Shestova, Miroslaw S Kozlowski, Katherine D Cummins, Xinhe Shan, Maksim Shestov, Adam Bagg, Jennifer J D Morrissette, Palak Sekhri, Cicera R Lazzarotto, Katherine R Calvo, Douglas B Kuhns, Robert E Donahue, Gregory K Behbehani, Shengdar Q Tsai, Cynthia E Dunbar, Saar Gill
RESUMEN

The absence of cancer-restricted surface markers is a major impediment to antigen-specific immunotherapy using chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells. For example, targeting the canonical myeloid marker CD33 in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) results in toxicity from destruction of normal myeloid cells. We hypothesized that a leukemia-specific antigen could be created by deleting CD33 from normal hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs), thereby generating a hematopoietic system resistant to CD33-targeted therapy and enabling specific targeting of AML with CAR T cells. We generated CD33-deficient human HSPCs and demonstrated normal engraftment and differentiation in immunodeficient mice. Autologous CD33 KO HSPC transplantation in rhesus macaques demonstrated long-term multilineage engraftment of gene-edited cells with normal myeloid function. CD33-deficient cells were impervious to CD33-targeting CAR T cells, allowing for efficient elimination of leukemia without myelotoxicity. These studies illuminate a novel approach to antigen-specific immunotherapy by genetically engineering the host to avoid on-target, off-tumor toxicity.

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Kit de preparación de la plantilla para la PCR de gran pureza, pkg of 100 purifications, suitable for DNA extraction