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Review
. 2025 Nov 15;437(22):169369.
doi: 10.1016/j.jmb.2025.169369. Epub 2025 Aug 7.

A New Approach to In Vivo Transformation of Killer T Cells

Affiliations
Review

A New Approach to In Vivo Transformation of Killer T Cells

Noe Rodriguez et al. J Mol Biol. .

Abstract

Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell therapy is a relatively new and powerful way of transforming T cells with receptors needed to recognize and kill diseased cells. Traditionally, it involves extraction of T cells from a patient, ex vivo transformation of them with CARs, expansion, and subsequent re-infusion into the patient. Recent developments aim to avoid this lengthy, costly patient-specific procedure by using various viral and non-viral vector particles for direct in vivo delivery of CAR-encoding genes. In this paper we highlight several fundamental connections between in vitro and in vivo aspects of this process. We discuss the proposed use of in vitro-reconstituted virus-like particles (VLPs), prepared from purified CAR-encoding mRNA and viral capsid protein, and functionalized with a T cell-targeting antibody. We compare and contrast these particles - and their use as gene vectors - with the several modalities currently employed that involve in cellulo generation of lentiviral or AAV vectors or in vitro complexation of nucleic acids with cationic polymers or lipid vesicles. We report the unique stoichiometric preciseness and thermodynamic stability of VLPs formed from anti-HIV-glycoprotein CAR-encoding mRNA and the capsid protein from a plant virus, and quantify the extent to which these monodisperse spherical VLPs are RNase resistant and lead to strong CAR expression in T cells. Further, in vitro cell-killing experiments are proposed, in which these CAR VLP-transformed T cells are mixed with HIV-infected cells, to be followed by in vivo experiments involving injection of the particles into HIV-infected humanized mice.

Keywords: T cell targeting; chimeric antigen receptor; virus-like particle.

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Conflict of interest statement

Declaration of competing interest The authors declare the following financial interests/personal relationships which may be considered as potential competing interests: “OY serves on the board of directors for Applied Medical, for which he has received cash and stock. OY is also on the scientific advisory board of CytoDyn, for which he has received cash and stock options. If there are other authors, they declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.”.

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