Improved Expansion and In Vivo Function of Patient T Cells by a Serum-free Medium

Improvements to T cell culture systems that promote long-term engraftment and function of adoptively transferred T cells will likely result in superior clinical benefit to more individuals. To this end, we recently developed a chemically defined cell culture medium that robustly expands all T cell s...

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Veröffentlicht in:Molecular therapy. Methods & clinical development 2018-03, Vol.8 (C), p.65-74
Hauptverfasser: Medvec, Andrew R, Ecker, Christopher, Kong, Hong, Winters, Emily A, Glover, Joshua, Varela-Rohena, Angel, Riley, James L
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Improvements to T cell culture systems that promote long-term engraftment and function of adoptively transferred T cells will likely result in superior clinical benefit to more individuals. To this end, we recently developed a chemically defined cell culture medium that robustly expands all T cell subsets in the absence of human serum. Using a humanized mouse model, we observed that T cells expanded in the absence of human serum provided durable control of tumors, whereas T cells expanded in medium supplemented with human serum only mediated transient control of tumor growth. Importantly, our new medium effectively expanded more differentiated T cells from multiple myeloma patients in the absence of serum. These patient-derived T cells were also able to provide durable control of B cell tumors , and this long-term control of cancer was lost when T cells were expanded in the presence of serum. Thus, engineered T cells expanded in an optimized medium in the absence of serum may have improved therapeutic potential.
ISSN:2329-0501
2329-0501
DOI:10.1016/j.omtm.2017.11.001