Inducible Apoptosis as a Safety Switch for Adoptive Cell Therapy
Baylor College of Medicine · Methodist Hospital · +3 more institutions
Abstract
Cellular therapies could play a role in cancer treatment and regenerative medicine if it were possible to quickly eliminate the infused cells in case of adverse events. We devised an inducible T-cell safety switch that is based on the fusion of human caspase 9 to a modified human FK-binding protein, allowing conditional dimerization. When exposed to a synthetic dimerizing drug, the inducible caspase 9 (iCasp9) becomes activated and leads to the rapid death of cells expressing this construct.
We tested the activity of our safety switch by introducing the gene into donor T cells given to enhance immune reconstitution in recipients of haploidentical stem-cell transplants. Patients received AP1903, an otherwise bioinert small-molecule dimerizing drug, if graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) developed. We measured the effects of AP1903 on GVHD and on the function and persistence of the cells containing the iCasp9 safety switch.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 38.32
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 31
Authors
20- ADAntonio Di StasiCorresponding
Baylor College of Medicine, Methodist Hospital, Texas Children's Hospital, Houston Methodist
- STSiok‐Keen Tey
Texas Children's Hospital, Houston Methodist, Methodist Hospital, Baylor College of Medicine
- GDGianpietro Dotti
Methodist Hospital, Texas Children's Hospital, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston Methodist
- YFYuriko Fujita
Texas Children's Hospital, Houston Methodist, Baylor College of Medicine, Methodist Hospital
- AAAlana A. Kennedy‐Nasser
Houston Methodist, Methodist Hospital, Texas Children's Hospital, Baylor College of Medicine
Topics & keywords
- Suicide gene
- Medicine
- Stem cell
- Genetic enhancement
- Immunology
- Apoptosis
- Cell therapy
- Transplantation
- Good health and well-being