Combining T-cell–specific activation and in vivo gene delivery through CD3-targeted lentiviral vectors

Genetic modification of T lymphocytes is a key issue in research and therapy. Conventional lentiviral vectors (LVs) are neither selective for T cells nor do they modify resting or minimally stimulated cells, which is crucial for applications, such as efficient in vivo modification of T lymphocytes....

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Veröffentlicht in:Blood advances 2020-11, Vol.4 (22), p.5702-5715
Hauptverfasser: Frank, Annika M., Braun, Angela H., Scheib, Lea, Agarwal, Shiwani, Schneider, Irene C., Fusil, Floriane, Perian, Séverine, Sahin, Ugur, Thalheimer, Frederic B., Verhoeyen, Els, Buchholz, Christian J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Genetic modification of T lymphocytes is a key issue in research and therapy. Conventional lentiviral vectors (LVs) are neither selective for T cells nor do they modify resting or minimally stimulated cells, which is crucial for applications, such as efficient in vivo modification of T lymphocytes. Here, we introduce novel CD3-targeted LVs (CD3-LVs) capable of genetically modifying human T lymphocytes without prior activation. For CD3 attachment, agonistic CD3-specific single-chain variable fragments were chosen. Activation, proliferation, and expansion mediated by CD3-LVs were less rapid compared with conventional antibody-mediated activation owing to lack of T-cell receptor costimulation. CD3-LVs delivered genes not only selectively into T cells but also under nonactivating conditions, clearly outperforming the benchmark vector vesicular stomatitis-LV glycoproteins under these conditions. Remarkably, CD3-LVs were properly active in gene delivery even when added to whole human blood in absence of any further stimuli. Upon administration of CD3-LV into NSG mice transplanted with human peripheral blood mononuclear cells, efficient and exclusive transduction of CD3+ T cells in all analyzed organs was achieved. Finally, the most promising CD3-LV successfully delivered a CD19-specific chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) into T lymphocytes in vivo in humanized NSG mice. Generation of CAR T cells was accompanied by elimination of human CD19+ cells from blood. Taken together, the data strongly support implementation of T-cell–activating properties within T-cell–targeted vector particles. These particles may be ideally suited for T-cell–specific in vivo gene delivery. •Display of agonistic single-chain variable fragments on lentiviral vector particles activates T cells and induces their proliferation.•Such particles allow gene transfer in unprocessed blood and generate CAR T cells directly in vivo. [Display omitted]
ISSN:2473-9529
2473-9537
DOI:10.1182/bloodadvances.2020002229