4.8 Article

Precision Engineering of an Anti-HLA-A2 Chimeric Antigen Receptor in Regulatory T Cells for Transplant Immune Tolerance

Journal

FRONTIERS IN IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 12, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.686439

Keywords

chimeric antigen receptor; regulatory T cells; genome editing; transplantation; humanized mouse model; immune tolerance; HLA; Treg

Categories

Funding

  1. NIDDK [UC4 DK116264, P30 DK063720]
  2. Juno Therapeutics
  3. JDRF [SRA-2019-776-S-B]
  4. Sean N. Parker Autoimmune Laboratory
  5. Swiss National Science Foundation [P300PB_174500]
  6. University Hospital of Geneva
  7. Jeffrey G. Klein Family Diabetes fellowship
  8. HIRN Emerging Leader in Type 1 Diabetes grant

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The study demonstrates that genome-engineered mono-antigen-specific A2-CAR Tregs can localize to HLA-A2-expressing grafts and exhibit antigen-dependent in vivo suppression. These Tregs do not impair the function of islets and can delay graft-versus-host disease. This approach may be applied towards developing precision Treg cell therapies for transplant tolerance.
Infusion of regulatory T cells (Tregs) engineered with a chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) targeting donor-derived human leukocyte antigen (HLA) is a promising strategy to promote transplant tolerance. Here, we describe an anti-HLA-A2 CAR (A2-CAR) generated by grafting the complementarity-determining regions (CDRs) of a human monoclonal anti-HLA-A2 antibody into the framework regions of the Herceptin 4D5 single-chain variable fragment and fusing it with a CD28-zeta signaling domain. The CDR-grafted A2-CAR maintained the specificity of the original antibody. We then generated HLA-A2 mono-specific human CAR Tregs either by deleting the endogenous T-cell receptor (TCR) via CRISPR/Cas9 and introducing the A2-CAR using lentiviral transduction or by directly integrating the CAR construct into the TCR alpha constant locus using homology-directed repair. These A2-CAR(+)TCR(deficient) human Tregs maintained both Treg phenotype and function in vitro. Moreover, they selectively accumulated in HLA-A2-expressing islets transplanted from either HLA-A2 transgenic mice or deceased human donors. A2-CAR(+)TCR(deficient) Tregs did not impair the function of these HLA-A2(+) islets, whereas similarly engineered A2-CAR(+)TCR(deficient)CD4(+) conventional T cells rejected the islets in less than 2 weeks. A2-CAR(+)TCR(deficient) Tregs delayed graft-versus-host disease only in the presence of HLA-A2, expressed either by co-transferred peripheral blood mononuclear cells or by the recipient mice. Altogether, we demonstrate that genome-engineered mono-antigen-specific A2-CAR Tregs localize to HLA-A2-expressing grafts and exhibit antigen-dependent in vivo suppression, independent of TCR expression. These approaches may be applied towards developing precision Treg cell therapies for transplant tolerance.

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