Epitope base editing CD45 in hematopoietic cells enables universal blood cancer immune therapy
Nils Wellhausen, Ryan P. O’Connell, Stefanie Lesch, Nils W. Engel, Austin K. Rennels, Donna Gonzales, Friederike Herbst, Regina M. Young, K. Christopher Garcia, David Weiner, Carl H. June, Saar I. Gill- General Medicine
In the absence of cell-surface cancer-specific antigens, immunotherapies such as chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells, monoclonal antibodies, or bispecific T cell engagers typically target lineage antigens. Currently, such immunotherapies are individually designed and tested for each disease. This approach is inefficient and limited to a few lineage antigens for which the on-target/off-tumor toxicities are clinically tolerated. Here, we sought to develop a universal CAR T cell therapy for blood cancers directed against the pan-leukocyte marker CD45. To protect healthy hematopoietic cells, including CAR T cells, from CD45-directed on-target/off-tumor toxicity while preserving the essential functions of CD45, we mapped the epitope on CD45 that is targeted by the CAR and used CRISPR adenine base-editing to install a function-preserving mutation sufficient to evade CAR T cell recognition. Epitope edited CD45 CAR T cell were fratricide-resistant and effective against patient-derived acute myeloid leukemia, B cell lymphoma, and acute T cell leukemia. Epitope edited hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) were protected from CAR T cells and, unlike CD45 knockout cells, could engraft, persist, and differentiate in vivo. Ex vivo epitope editing in HSCs and T cells enables the safe and effective use of CD45-directed CAR-T cells and bispecific T cell engagers for the universal treatment of hematologic malignancies and might be exploited for other diseases requiring intensive hematopoietic ablation.