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CAR T cells: Building on the CD19 paradigm

Anat Globerson Levin, Isabelle Rivière, Zelig Eshhar, Michel Sadelain

2021European Journal of Immunology69 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Spearheaded by the therapeutic use of chimeric antigen receptors (CARs) targeting CD19, synthetic immunology has entered the clinical arena. CARs are recombinant receptors for antigen that engage cell surface molecules through the variable region of an antibody and signal through arrayed T-cell activating and costimulatory domains. CARs allow redirection of T-cell cytotoxicity against any antigen of choice, independent of MHC expression. Patient T cells engineered to express CARs specific for CD19 have yielded remarkable outcomes in subjects with relapsed/refractory B- cell malignancies, setting off unprecedented interest in T-cell engineering and cell-based cancer immunotherapy. In this review, we present the challenges to extend the use of CAR T cells to solid tumors and other pathologies. We further highlight progress in CAR design, cell manufacturing, and genome editing, which in aggregate hold the promise of generating safer and more effective genetically instructed immunity. Novel engineered cell types, including innate T-cell types, natural killer (NK) cells, macrophages, and induced pluripotent stem cell-derived immune cells, are on the horizon, as are applications of CAR T cells to treat autoimmunity, severe infections, and senescence-associated pathologies.

Topics & Concepts

Chimeric antigen receptorBiologyAntigenT cellImmunotherapyImmunologyCancer immunotherapyMajor histocompatibility complexCD19Immune systemCell biologyCAR-T cell therapy researchNanowire Synthesis and ApplicationsImmune Cell Function and Interaction
CAR T cells: Building on the CD19 paradigm | Litcius