Genome Engineering for Next-Generation Cellular Immunotherapies.

Biochemistry

Department of Genetics, Yale University School of Medicine, 333 Cedar Street, New Haven, Connecticut 06520, United States.

Published: December 2023

Over the past decade, cellular immunotherapies such as CAR-T, TCR-T, and NK cell therapies have achieved tremendous success in cancer treatment. However, various challenges and obstacles remain, including antigen escape, immunosuppression in the tumor microenvironment, toxicities, and on-target off-tumor effects. Recent strategies for overcoming these roadblocks have included the use of genome engineering. Multiplexed CRISPR-Cas and synthetic biology approaches facilitate the development of cell therapies with higher potency and sophisticated modular control; they also offer a toolkit for allogeneic therapy development. Engineering approaches have targeted genetic modifications to enhance long-term persistence through cytokine modulation, knockout of genes mediating immunosuppressive signals, and genes such as the endogenous TCR and MHC-I that elicit adverse host-graft interactions in an allogeneic context. Genome engineering approaches for other immune cell types are also being explored, such as CAR macrophages and CAR-NK cells. Future therapeutic development of cellular immunotherapies may also be guided by novel target discovery through unbiased CRISPR genetic screening approaches.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11320893PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.biochem.2c00340DOI Listing

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