Treatment of allergic eosinophilic asthma through engineered IL-5-anchored chimeric antigen receptor T cells

Abstract Severe eosinophilic asthma (SEA) is a therapy-resistant respiratory condition with poor clinical control. Treatment efficacy and patient compliance of current therapies remain unsatisfactory. Here, inspired by the remarkable success of chimeric antigen receptor-based cellular adoptive immun...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sisi Chen, Gaoying Chen, Fang Xu, Beibei Sun, Xinyi Chen, Wei Hu, Fei Li, Madiha Zahra Syeda, Haixia Chen, Youqian Wu, Peng Wu, Ruirui Jing, Xinwei Geng, Lingling Zhang, Longguang Tang, Wen Li, Zhihua Chen, Chao Zhang, Jie Sun, Wei Chen, Huahao Shen, Songmin Ying
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2022-08-01
Series:Cell Discovery
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41421-022-00433-y
Description
Summary:Abstract Severe eosinophilic asthma (SEA) is a therapy-resistant respiratory condition with poor clinical control. Treatment efficacy and patient compliance of current therapies remain unsatisfactory. Here, inspired by the remarkable success of chimeric antigen receptor-based cellular adoptive immunotherapies demonstrated for the treatment of a variety of malignant tumors, we engineered a cytokine-anchored chimeric antigen receptor T (CCAR-T) cell system using a chimeric IL-5-CD28-CD3ζ receptor to trigger T-cell-mediated killing of eosinophils that are elevated during severe asthma attacks. IL-5-anchored CCAR-T cells exhibited selective and effective killing capacity in vitro and restricted eosinophil differentiation with apparent protection against allergic airway inflammation in two mouse models of asthma. Notably, a single dose of IL-5-anchored CCAR-T cells resulted in persistent protection against asthma-related conditions over three months, significantly exceeding the typical therapeutic window of current mAb-based treatments in the clinics. This study presents a cell-based treatment strategy for SEA and could set the stage for a new era of precision therapies against a variety of intractable allergic diseases in the future.
ISSN:2056-5968