CINCINNATI, May 12, 2020 The explosion in cellular immunotherapy that has revolutionized cancer care in recent years may soon begin showing potential application in treatment for lupus and other autoimmune diseases, thanks to a laboratory breakthrough led by experts at Cincinnati Children's and published in the journal Cell Reports Medicine.
In cancer, CAR T-cell therapy involves engineering T cells with chimeric antigen receptors (CAR) that allow them to recognize specific molecules on the surface of tumor cells. For certain forms of leukemia, some lung cancers, and other malignancies, this form of cellular immunotherapy has been life-changing for patients. Recent evidence suggests engineering natural killer (NK) cells to express CAR may be equally effective as T cells but with increased safety and clinical feasibility.
There is growing interest in the safety and efficacy of applying CAR cellular therapies to deadly and incurable autoimmune diseases. However, finding specific cell targets for diseases such as lupus has been much more difficultuntil now.
In a first-of-its-kind discovery, a team of Cincinnati Children's scientists led by Seth Reighard, PhD, Stephen Waggoner, PhD, and Hermine Brunner, MD, MSc, MBA, has engineered a CAR with the potential to revolutionize care of patients with lupus. When expressed by human NK cells, this CAR enables targeted elimination of T follicular helper (TFH) cells without harming other types of T-cells.
This treatment showed specificity in human cells in lab tests, and improved disease measures in a humanized mouse model of lupustwo key early signs of progress that suggest further research is warranted.
"This is the first method to specifically remove an otherwise intractable population of harmful cells," Waggoner says. "We think targeting them will be safe and clinically beneficial in multiple diseases. Our approach started with lupus because the disease is a leading cause of death in young women for which a cure is presently lacking."
The study appears in the first issue of the new, open access journal Cell Reports Medicine, which also carries a commentary about this new approach from Cecile King, PhD, an immunology expert at the Garvan Institute of Medical Research in Australia.
"Dysregulated TFH cells are associated with the development and severity of several autoimmune diseases and T cell malignancies," King states. "Indeed, the central role of TFH cells in many diseases has made them a major target for therapeutic modulation. The study by Reighard et al. provides exciting proof-of-principle evidence for the use of CAR NK cells in TFH-driven diseases."
How do CAR NK cells work?
The lupus-driving cells that the team wanted to eliminate lack cell-surface targets unique enough to distinguish them from other, desirable cells. To achieve selective targeting, the team realized a cardinal feature of TFH cells that could be exploited by carefully engineering the biochemistry of the CAR molecule.
Specifically, TFH express much greater quantities of a surface receptor, programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1), than other cells that also express this receptor. Since activation of a CAR expressing NK cell is dependent on the strength of interaction between the CAR and its target receptor, as well as the number of such interactions between an NK cell and a target, the team engineered a CAR with relatively weak binding to PD-1. As a result, only cells like TFH that exhibit high expression of PD-1 trigger activation of the CAR NK and are eliminated as a result, which cells with lower levels of PD-1, including regulatory T cell (Treg) and memory T cells, are spared.
These programmed killer cells show early signs of potential as a therapy for systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), which affects 20-150 per 100,000 people in the U.S. In fact, lupus ranks in the five causes of death among African American and Hispanic women, aged 15-34.
In addition, aberrant TFH responses play roles in several other autoimmune diseases, including Sjgren syndrome, juvenile dermatomyositis, multiple sclerosis, type 1 diabetes, and rheumatoid arthritis.
Although the potential toxicity of selectively eliminating TFH remains unexplored, the preservation of naive and memory CD4 T cells as well as B cells and other types of immune cells suggests that the state of immunodeficiency induced by these CAR NK cells will be far less severe than other immunotherapeutic strategies applied to autoimmune disease (e.g., rituximab).
Discovery based on years of research
This advance in CAR technology build upon previous work by Waggoner and colleagues in 2015 and 2018 that revealed how NK cells play surprising regulatory roles in infection and autoimmune disease.
The conceptual connections between infections and autoimmune diseases were further strengthened by a discovery led by John Harley, MD, PhD, and colleagues at Cincinnati Children's. In a 2018 study in Nature Genetics, they revealed how the Epstein-Barr virus uses groups of transcription factors to alter human DNA in ways that can increase a person's risk of developing lupus, multiple sclerosis, type 1 diabetes, and other diseases.
What's Next?
More work is needed to determine how much benefit can be gained by disrupting the role of TFH cells in lupus and other conditions. Concerns to address also include how to prevent the killer cells from attacking non-targeted "good" cells, and how to efficiently deliver the therapeutic cells.
Researchers are working to develop "suicide switches" for CAR NK cells that would make them safer for clinical use, Waggoner says. But importantly, NK cells appear to pose lower toxicity risk than CAR T-cell therapies in multiple clinical trials in cancer patients. Given the contributions of T cells to disease pathogenesis in lupus and other autoimmune disease, therapeutic NK cells likely yield additional benefit in these contexts.
Although the present study was performed with a human NK-cell line approved for clinical use by the FDA, the team envisions flexibility in the clinical application of the new CAR to lupus. CAR engineering of patient cells or cells from unrelated donors, including cord blood or induced pluripotent stem cell-derived NK cells, have all demonstrated excellent safety profiles while maintaining desirable efficacy in clinical trials.
"The CAR can be introduced to various effector cells using mRNA transfection, transposons, or viral vectors, Waggoner says. "Freezers full of CAR-expressing induced pluripotent stem cell-derived NK cells would provide an off-the-shelf product that could be rapidly and repeatedly administered to numerous patients in order to quell harmful flares of disease activity and promote sustained disease remission.
"If successes continue, a clinical trial might be possible within the next few years," Waggoner says.
View original content to download multimedia:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/novel-car-nk-cell-technology-could-lead-to-new-treatments-for-lupus-other-incurable-diseases-301057216.html
SOURCE Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center
Read the original:
Novel CAR NK-cell technology could lead to new treatments for lupus, other incurable diseases - Stockhouse
- Breast Cancer Is Most Common Cancer In India, 1.38 Million Cases Diagnosed Annually. Know Estimated Incidence By 2030 - ABP Live - November 26th, 2023
- What Is Amyloidosis? All About The Rare Disease That Pervez Musharraf Suffered From - ABP Live - February 8th, 2023
- Autophagic death of neural stem cells mediates chronic stress-induced ... - November 7th, 2022
- Programmed cell death - Wikipedia - November 7th, 2022
- Hematopoietic Stem Cells | Hematopoiesis | Properties & Functions - September 4th, 2022
- Canadian Blood Services Stem Cells for Life - September 4th, 2022
- Devastation over death of schoolgirl, 11, who hoped she was beating cancer - Leicestershire Live - September 4th, 2022
- From optimized stem cell transplants to CAR T cell therapy: Advancing options for cancer, HIV and more - City of Hope - September 4th, 2022
- Scientists unlock the key to immortality in jellyfish - Syfy - September 4th, 2022
- Forge Biologics Reports Positive Clinical Data on Brain Development and Motor Function from the RESKUE Novel Phase 1/2 Gene Therapy Trial in Patients... - September 4th, 2022
- Menin Inhibitors Have Potential to Become the Next Class of Targeted Therapy in AML - Targeted Oncology - September 4th, 2022
- Wanted murder suspect John Belfield believed to still be in the UK as two more arrested over death of Thomas Campbell - The Manc - September 4th, 2022
- Next-day manufacture of a novel anti-CD19 CAR-T therapy for B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia: first-in-human clinical study | Blood Cancer Journal... - July 8th, 2022
- Can minds persist when they are cut off from the world? - Livescience.com - July 8th, 2022
- Black Adolescent Young Adults With AML Have Worse Outcomes Vs White Population - Cancer Network - July 8th, 2022
- Akari Therapeutics Announces First Patient to Complete Course of Treatment in the Phase III Part A Clinical Trial of Investigational Nomacopan in... - July 8th, 2022
- How abortion ruling could affect IVF and embryonic research - The Almanac Online - July 8th, 2022
- This Morning viewers 'in tears' after boy meets donor who saved his life - Devon Live - July 8th, 2022
- Alpena detective: 'Good people out there' | News, Sports, Jobs - Alpena News - July 8th, 2022
- 'I miss my best friend': Five-year-old runs 10k to honour girl who died from rare brain tumour - Teesside Live - July 8th, 2022
- Humanigen Announces Peer-Reviewed Publication in Thorax Supporting Early Treatment of Hospitalized COVID-19 Patients with Lenzilumab Guided by... - July 8th, 2022
- Novartis AG, AstraZeneca Plc, and Pfizer Inc Among Leading Companies in the Thyroid Cancer Pipeline Products Market | Globaldata Plc - Yahoo Finance - July 8th, 2022
- A New Strategy Could Turn the Tide in Stem Cell GVHD - Medical Device and Diagnostics Industry - January 17th, 2022
- Vertex type 1 diabetes vs stem cell therapy - The Boar - January 17th, 2022
- Two-Year OS Doubles for Patients With Philadelphia-Positive Relapsed ALL After HSCT - AJMC.com Managed Markets Network - January 17th, 2022
- Nowakowski Considers CD19 Therapy in Transplant-Ineligible DLBCL - Targeted Oncology - January 17th, 2022
- Psaki demolishes Doocy with stats as he tries to claim covid now an illness of the vaccinated - newsconcerns - January 17th, 2022
- Doctors and Researchers Probe How COVID-19 Attacks the Heart - The Scientist - January 17th, 2022
- Who does donated blood that's direly needed help? - WTOP - January 17th, 2022
- Places Where Omicron is Most Contagious Eat This Not That - Eat This, Not That - January 17th, 2022
- UHN and U of T receive $24-million federal grant for transplant research - News@UofT - January 17th, 2022
- Glycyrrhizic acid ameliorates submandibular gland oxidative stress, autophagy and vascular dysfunction in rat model of type 1 diabetes | Scientific... - January 17th, 2022
- Stem cells in cancer therapy: opportunities and challenges - January 1st, 2022
- Life After Brain Death: Is the Body Still 'Alive'? | Live ... - January 1st, 2022
- Autologous Adult Stem Cells in the Treatment of Stroke | SCCAA - Dove Medical Press - January 1st, 2022
- Stem Cell Mimicking Nanoencapsulation for Targeting Arthrit | IJN - Dove Medical Press - January 1st, 2022
- Cellular Therapies Fill Unmet Needs in R/R Multiple Myeloma - Targeted Oncology - January 1st, 2022
- Upregulated expression of actin-like 6A is a risk factor | CMAR - Dove Medical Press - January 1st, 2022
- COVID-19 Takes a Toll on People with Blood Cancers and Disorders - Cancer Health Treatment News - January 1st, 2022
- Mental health disorders and heart diseases - Rising Kashmir - January 1st, 2022
- Research breakthrough could mean better treatment for patients with most deadly form of brain tumor - EurekAlert - October 26th, 2021
- European Commission Approves Merck's KEYTRUDA (pembrolizumab) Plus Chemotherapy as Treatment for Certain Patients With Locally Recurrent Unresectable... - October 26th, 2021
- European Commission Selects Humanigen's Lenzilumab as One of the 10 Most Promising Treatments for COVID-19 - Galveston County Daily News - October 26th, 2021
- Everything You Need To Know About COVID Booster Shots - Colorado Times Recorder - October 26th, 2021
- Stem cells and their role in lung transplant rejection - Michigan Medicine - October 5th, 2021
- Losing Your Hair? You Might Blame the Great Stem Cell Escape. - The New York Times - October 5th, 2021
- Will humans ever be immortal? - Livescience.com - October 5th, 2021
- Healthcare Researchers Are Putting HUMAN Immune Systems In Pigs To Study Illnesses-Here's The Tech Behind It - Tech Times - October 5th, 2021
- Why Bezos, Musk, Page and other billionaires want to live forever - New York Post - October 5th, 2021
- Faster healing of wounds can decrease pain and suffering and save lives - ABC 12 News - October 5th, 2021
- U.S. FDA Approves Kite's Tecartus as the First and Only Car T for Adults With Relapsed or Refractory B-cell Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia - Business... - October 5th, 2021
- Skeletons' broken clavicles tell a centuries-old tale of humans and horses - Massive Science - October 5th, 2021
- Environmental Factor - August 2021: Extramural Papers of the Month - Environmental Factor Newsletter - August 4th, 2021
- Role of traumatic brain injury in the development of glioma | JIR - Dove Medical Press - August 4th, 2021
- Targeted Therapeutics Market: Increase in Incidence of Cancer to Drive Global Market - BioSpace - August 4th, 2021
- Accumulation of Regulatory T Cells in Triple Negative Breast Cancer Ca | CMAR - Dove Medical Press - August 4th, 2021
- Novel CAR-T Cell Therapy Produces Early and Deep Responses in Certain Patients with Multiple Myeloma - Curetoday.com - June 7th, 2021
- Autophagy suppresses the formation of hepatocyte-derived cancer-initiating ductular progenitor cells in the liver - Science Advances - June 7th, 2021
- Cancer research: New advances and innovations - Medical News Today - June 7th, 2021
- Fulvestrant Alone Found to be Superior to Venetoclax/Fulvestrant Combo in ER+/HER2- Breast Cancer - Targeted Oncology - June 7th, 2021
- Merck's KEYTRUDA Given After Surgery Reduced the Risk of Disease Recurrence or Death by 32% Versus Placebo as Adjuvant Therapy in Patients With Renal... - June 7th, 2021
- Stem cell study illuminates the cause of an inherited heart disorder | Penn Today - Penn Today - February 14th, 2021
- The race to treat a rare, fatal syndrome may help others with common disorders like diabetes - Science Magazine - February 14th, 2021
- Jasper Therapeutics Announces Positive Data from Phase 1 Clinical Trial of JSP191 as Targeted Stem Cell Conditioning Agent in Patients with... - February 14th, 2021
- The Very First Signs of an Immune Response Have Been Filmed in a Developing Embryo - ScienceAlert - February 14th, 2021
- Arlo's Army needs stem cell donor as mum begs for help to save three-year-old's life - Glasgow Live - February 14th, 2021
- Astellas and Seagen Announce Phase 3 Trial Results Demonstrating Survival Advantage of PADCEV (enfortumab vedotin-ejfv) in Patients with Previously... - February 14th, 2021
- [Full text] Successful Use of Nivolumab in a Patient with Head and Neck Cancer Aft | OTT - Dove Medical Press - February 14th, 2021
- The drug treatments offering the best hope of a way out of the Covid crisis - Telegraph.co.uk - February 14th, 2021
- In the war against Covid, an arsenal of drugs is on the way - Telegraph.co.uk - February 14th, 2021
- Kat Wests husband, Jeff West, sentenced to 16 years in wifes death - AL.com - February 9th, 2021
- Harnessing the Potential of Cell and Gene Therapy - OncLive - February 9th, 2021
- I Survived Cancer, and Then I Needed to Remember How to Live - The Atlantic - February 9th, 2021
- [Full text] Higher Red Blood Cell Distribution Width is a Poor Prognostic Factor f | CMAR - Dove Medical Press - February 9th, 2021
- West Belfast woman to be remembered in special TV documentary - Belfast Live - January 29th, 2021
- UTV documentary tells of young Belfast woman's lasting legacy to promote stem cell donation - The Irish News - January 29th, 2021
- L-MIND Trial Results Show CD19 Antibody Is Reasonable in R/R DLBCL - Targeted Oncology - January 29th, 2021
- Vertex Announces FDA Clearance of Investigational New Drug (IND) Application for VX-880, a Novel Cell Therapy for the Treatment of Type 1 Diabetes... - January 29th, 2021
- If I Have Cancer, Dementia or MS, Should I Get the Covid Vaccine? - Kaiser Health News - January 29th, 2021
- Experimental taphonomy of organelles and the fossil record of early eukaryote evolution - Science Advances - January 29th, 2021