Development of an in situ CAR-T cell protocol through optical and PSMA-targeted PET imaging
- PMID: 40493195
- PMCID: PMC12184651
- DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2504950122
Development of an in situ CAR-T cell protocol through optical and PSMA-targeted PET imaging
Abstract
In situ T cell transfection methods overcome the complexity and high costs associated with conventional chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-T therapy. However, the in situ CAR-T cell approach operates within the patient's complex immune environment and bypasses preinfusion ex vivo cellular quality controls, necessitating advanced imaging techniques to track immune cell migration and function. Positron emission tomography (PET) can detect biochemical processes in patients and, when combined with a radiotracer specific for the engineered cells, can monitor CAR-T cell trafficking. Herein, we develop an approach for in situ T cell generation, tracking, and functional assessment using anti-CD5-conjugated lipid nanoparticles for codelivering CD19 CAR mRNA (mCAR19) and a prostate-specific membrane antigen mRNA (mPSMA) tag. With interleukin-7 (IL-7) preconditioning and repeated administration, this approach achieves tumor-free survival in 75% of B cell lymphoma-bearing mice (similar efficacy to ex vivo approaches), and through PET imaging of 68Ga-PSMA-617, the generation and tumor infiltration of in situ-engineered PSMA-tagged CD19 CAR-T cells is validated.
Keywords: CAR-T therapy; PET; immunotherapy; lipid nanoparticles; mRNA therapeutics.
Conflict of interest statement
Competing interests statement:The authors declare no competing interest.
References
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- Labanieh L., Mackall C. L., CAR immune cells: Design principles, resistance and the next generation. Nature 614, 635–648 (2023). - PubMed
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