Article
Author: An, Zili ; Guo, Raymond ; Skoble, Justin ; Scherer, Jessica ; Fowler, Tristan W. ; Nyer, David B. ; Kohrs, Bryan ; Bryan, Mara ; Larroca Vicena, Vanina ; Toh, Mckenzi S. ; Schilling, Benjamin ; Degagné, Émilie ; Kufeldt, Heinrich J. ; Irby, Matthew J. ; Banh, Lynda ; Kwong, George ; Owen, Arthur L.G. ; Thompson, Matthew ; Fuller, Christopher K. ; Reyes, Gustavo A. ; Shaw, McKay ; Mutha, Devin ; Smith, Stephen C. ; McSweeney, Kyle ; Garner, Elizabeth ; Churchward, Glen ; Davis, Ryan T. ; Kanner, Steven B. ; Stanaway, Morena ; Gradia, Scott ; Donohoue, Paul D. ; Roy, Suparna ; Edwards, Leslie ; Ruan, Finey
Abstract:Allogeneic chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell therapies hold the potential to overcome many of the challenges associated with patient-derived (autologous) CAR T cells. Key considerations in the development of allogeneic CAR T cell therapies include prevention of graft-vs-host disease (GvHD) and suppression of allograft rejection. Here, we describe preclinical data supporting the ongoing first-in-human clinical study, the CaMMouflage trial (NCT05722418), evaluating CB-011 in patients with relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma. CB-011 is a hypoimmunogenic, allogeneic anti–B-cell maturation antigen (BCMA) CAR T cell therapy candidate. CB-011 cells feature 4 genomic alterations and were engineered from healthy donor–derived T cells using a Cas12a CRISPR hybrid RNA–DNA (chRDNA) genome-editing technology platform. To address allograft rejection, CAR T cells were engineered to prevent endogenous HLA class I complex expression and overexpress a single-chain polyprotein complex composed of beta-2 microglobulin (B2M) tethered to HLA-E. In addition, T-cell receptor (TCR) expression was disrupted at the TCR alpha constant locus in combination with the site-specific insertion of a humanized BCMA-specific CAR. CB-011 cells exhibited robust plasmablast cytotoxicity in vitro in a mixed lymphocyte reaction in cell cocultures derived from patients with multiple myeloma. In addition, CB-011 cells demonstrated suppressed recognition by and cytotoxicity from HLA-mismatched T cells. CB-011 cells were protected from natural killer cell–mediated cytotoxicity in vitro and in vivo due to endogenous promoter-driven expression of B2M–HLA-E. Potent antitumor efficacy, when combined with an immune-cloaking armoring strategy to dampen allograft rejection, offers optimized therapeutic potential in multiple myeloma.See related Spotlight by Caimi and Melenhorst, p. 385