4.6 Article

Charge-altering releasable transporters enable phenotypic manipulation of natural killer cells for cancer immunotherapy

Journal

BLOOD ADVANCES
Volume 4, Issue 17, Pages 4244-4255

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1182/bloodadvances.2020002355

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Funding

  1. National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health (NIH) [CA031845, R35CA197353-04]
  2. National Science Foundation [CHE848280, CHE1607092]
  3. Chan Zuckerberg Biohub
  4. National Institute on Drug Abuse, NIH [5DP1DA04608902]
  5. Burroughs Wellcome Fund Investigators in the Pathogenesis of Infectious Diseases [1016687]
  6. Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation Pilot Grant through the Stanford Human Systems Immunology Center
  7. Stanford Medical Scientist Training Program [5T32GM007365-44]
  8. Stanford Bio-X Interdisciplinary Graduate Fellowship

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Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) natural killer (NK) cells are an emerging cell therapy with promising results in oncology trials. However, primary human NK cells are difficult to transfect, hampering both mechanistic studies and clinical applications of NK cells. Currently, NK cell CAR modification relies on viral vectors or cell activation. The former raises cost and tolerability issues, while the latter alters NK cell biology. Here, we report that readily synthesized and inexpensive nonviral charge-altering releasable transporters (CARTs) efficiently transfect primary human NK cells with messenger RNA without relying on NK cell activation. Compared with electroporation, CARTs transfect NK cells more efficiently, better preserve cell viability, and cause minimal reconfiguration of NK cell phenotype and function. We use CARTs to generate cytotoxic primary anti-CD19 CAR NK cells, demonstrating this technology can drive clinical applications of NK cells. To our knowledge, CARTs represent the first efficacious transfection technique for resting primary human NK cells that preserves NK cell phenotype and can enable new biological discoveries and therapeutic applications of this understudied lymphocyte subset.

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