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Genetic re-direction of canine primary T cells for clinical trial use in pet dogs with spontaneous cancer

Antonia Rotolo, Matthew J. Atherton, Brian Kasper, Kumudhini Preethi Haran, Nicola J. Mason

2021STAR Protocols23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Immunocompetent pet dogs develop spontaneous, human-like cancers, representing a parallel patient population for the investigation of chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) therapies. We have optimized a retrovirus-based protocol to efficiently CAR transduce primary T cells from healthy and tumor-bearing dogs. While transduction efficiencies and CAR-T expansion vary among dogs, CAR expression is typically higher and more stable compared with previous protocols, thus enabling human and comparative oncology researchers to use the dog as a pre-clinical model for human CAR-T cell research. For complete details on the use and execution of this protocol, please refer to Panjwani et al. (2020).

Topics & Concepts

Transduction (biophysics)Clinical trialRetrovirusPopulationCancer researchChimeric antigen receptorMedicineCancerProtocol (science)OncologyComputational biologyBiologyImmunologyInternal medicinePathologyImmunotherapyVirusAlternative medicineBiochemistryEnvironmental healthCAR-T cell therapy researchVirus-based gene therapy researchCancer Research and Treatments
Genetic re-direction of canine primary T cells for clinical trial use in pet dogs with spontaneous cancer | Litcius