Efficacy of third-party chimeric antigen receptor modified peripheral blood natural killer cells for adoptive cell therapy of B cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia

01 Pubblicazione su rivista
Quintarelli Concetta, Simona Sivori, Caruso Simona, Carlomagno Simona, Falco Michela, Boffa Iolanda, Orlando Domenico, Guercio Marika, Abbaszadeh Zeinab, Sinibaldi Matilde, Di Cecca Stefano, Camera Antonio, Cembrola Biancamaria, Pitisci Angela, Andreani Marco, Vinti Luciana, Gaspari Stefania, Del Bufalo Francesca, Algeri Mattia, Li Pira Giuseppina, Moseley Annemarie, Angelis Biagio De, Moretta Lorenzo, Locatelli Franco
ISSN: 0887-6924

We developed an innovative and efficient, feeder-free culture method to genetically modify and expand peripheral blood-derived NK cells with high proliferative capacity, while preserving the responsiveness of their native activating receptors. Activated peripheral blood NK cells were efficiently transduced by a retroviral vector, carrying a second-generation CAR targeting CD19. CAR expression was demonstrated across the different NK-cell subsets. CAR.CD19-NK cells display higher antileukemic activity toward CD19+ cell lines and primary blasts obtained from patients with B-cell precursor ALL compared with unmodified NK cells. In vivo animal model data showed that the antileukemia activity of CAR.CD19-NK cell is superimposable to that of CAR-T cells, with a lower xenograft toxicity profile. These data support the feasibility of generating feeder-free expanded, genetically modified peripheral blood NK cells for effective “off-the-shelf” immuno-gene-therapy, while their innate alloreactivity can be safely harnessed to potentiate allogeneic cell therapy.

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