Biologic and Functional Characterization of In Vivo CAR-T cells

NIH RePORTER · NIH · F30 · $48,974 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Project Summary Chimeric Antigen Receptor (CAR) T cell therapy has revolutionized treatment for B cell malignancies by targeting T cytotoxicity to the site of the tumor. Despite the success of CAR-T cells in B cell malignancies, more than half of patients receiving CAR-T cell treatment fail to achieve long term disease control. Therapeutic failure can be attributed to many causes including the inverse relationship between CAR-T cell manufacturing duration and the resulting anti-tumor potency. Additionally, CAR-T cell manufacturing poses barriers to access such as cost and difficulty meeting supply demand equilibrium. To engineer the next generation of CAR-T cells with enhanced anti-tumor efficacy and greater patient access, I will generate CD19.28z CAR-T cells in vivo using modified lentiviral particles engineered to express a T cell targeting antibody fragment, referred to in this proposal as the Programmable Antibody-mediated Cellular Knock-In of T cells (PACK-IT) system. The PACK-IT system will be used to explore my central hypothesis: engineering T cells in vivo is feasible and will deliver a more efficacious CAR-T cells (PACK-IT CAR-T cells) with distinct biologic features, reducing cost and increasing access. I have demonstrated feasibility of the PACK-IT system to generate functional CD19.28z CAR T cells in vitro and extended the use of the PACK-IT system to successfully transduce T cells in tumor bearing mice. Based on the proof-of-concept experiments, I propose to (i) optimize the PACK-IT system in terms of transduction efficiency, phenotype, and anti-tumor potency of resulting CAR-T cells, (ii) in vivo comparison of PACK-IT CAR-T cells and those made via conventional manufacturing, and (iii) assess the impact of armoring PACK-IT CAR-T cells with drug regulatable cytokine receptors on anti-tumor potency in immunocompetent hosts. Collectively, the proposed work will result in a method to produce CAR-T cells in vivo, allow rigorous characterization of the impact of eliminating the ex vivo manufacturing process, and develop PACK-IT CAR-T cells armed with regulatable cytokine receptors to boost T cell function in vivo. The proposed work will take place at Stanford University School of Medicine, a leading institution in immunology and immunotherapy and a setting that emphasizes innovation. Dr. Crystal Mackall is the ideal sponsor for this project due to her extensive track record of mentoring successful physician scientists and her expertise in T cell biology and translational therapeutics. In addition, I will be supported by a multidisciplinary team including mentorship from Drs. Howard Chang (genome wide sequencing, engineered lentiviral vectors), Christopher Barnes (structural virology), and Anusha Kalbasi (engineered cytokine receptors).

Key facts

NIH application ID
10903439
Project number
1F30CA291106-01
Recipient
STANFORD UNIVERSITY
Principal Investigator
Kylie A Burdsall
Activity code
F30
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2024
Award amount
$48,974
Award type
1
Project period
2024-06-01 → 2027-05-31