Genetic ablation of adhesion ligands averts rejection of allogeneic immune cells.
Overview
abstract
Allogeneic cell therapies hold promise for broad clinical implementation, but face limitations due to potential rejection by the recipient immune system. Silencing of beta-2-microglobulin ( B2M ) expression is commonly employed to evade T cell-mediated rejection, although absence of B2M triggers missing-self responses by recipient natural killer (NK) cells. Here, we demonstrate that deletion of the adhesion ligands CD54 and CD58 on targets cells robustly dampens NK cell reactivity across all sub-populations. Genetic deletion of CD54 and CD58 in B2M -deficient allogeneic chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T and multi-edited induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-derived NK cells reduces their susceptibility to rejection by NK cells in vitro and in vivo without affecting their anti-tumor effector potential. Thus, these data suggest that genetic ablation of adhesion ligands effectively alleviates rejection of allogeneic immune cells for immunotherapy.