HLA reduction of human T cells facilitates generation of immunologically multicompatible cellular products

•HLA reduction of primary human T cells can be achieved in a single step in combination with re-expression of defined antigen receptors.•HLA–reduced T cells maintain canonical HLA class I expression and escape NK-cell–mediated recognition in addition to T cell alloreactivity. [Display omitted] Adopt...

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Veröffentlicht in:Blood advances 2024-07, Vol.8 (13), p.3416-3426
Hauptverfasser: Winterhalter, Pascal M., Warmuth, Linda, Hilgendorf, Philipp, Schütz, Julius M., Dötsch, Sarah, Tonn, Torsten, Cicin-Sain, Luka, Busch, Dirk H., Schober, Kilian
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•HLA reduction of primary human T cells can be achieved in a single step in combination with re-expression of defined antigen receptors.•HLA–reduced T cells maintain canonical HLA class I expression and escape NK-cell–mediated recognition in addition to T cell alloreactivity. [Display omitted] Adoptive cellular therapies have shown enormous potential but are complicated by personalization. Because of HLA mismatch, rejection of transferred T cells frequently occurs, compromising the T-cell graft's functionality. This obstacle has led to the development of HLA knock-out (KO) T cells as universal donor cells. Whether such editing directly affects T-cell functionality remains poorly understood. In addition, HLA KO T cells are susceptible to missing self-recognition through natural killer (NK) cells and lack of canonical HLA class I expression may represent a safety hazard. Engineering of noncanonical HLA molecules could counteract NK-cell recognition, but further complicates the generation of cell products. Here, we show that HLA KO does not alter T-cell functionality in vitro and in vivo. Although HLA KO abrogates allogeneic T-cell responses, it elicits NK-cell recognition. To circumvent this problem, we demonstrate that selective editing of individual HLA class I molecules in primary human T cells is possible. Such HLA reduction not only inhibits T-cell alloreactivity and NK-cell recognition simultaneously, but also preserves the T-cell graft's canonical HLA class I expression. In the presence of allogeneic T cells and NK cells, T cells with remaining expression of a single, matched HLA class I allele show improved functionality in vivo in comparison with conventional allogeneic T cells. Since reduction to only a few, most frequent HLA haplotypes would already be compatible with large shares of patient populations, this approach significantly extends the toolbox to generate broadly applicable cellular products.
ISSN:2473-9529
2473-9537
2473-9537
DOI:10.1182/bloodadvances.2023011496