Personalized CRISPR knock-in cytokine gene therapy to remodel the tumor microenvironment and enhance CAR T cell therapy in solid tumors
Autor/innen
- M. Launspach
- J. Macos
- S. Afzal
- J. Hohmann
- S. Beez
- M. Pilgram
- E. Ohlendorf
- A. Yevchuk
- C.F.T. van der Ven
- C. Lachiheb
- L. Andersch
- M. Jens
- M.L. Appis
- F. Zirngibl
- J. Kath
- M. Stecklum
- K. Anders
- D.L. Wagner
- R. Kühn
- A. Eggert
- A. Künkele
Journal
- bioRxiv
Quellenangabe
- bioRxiv
Zusammenfassung
The immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment (TME) remains a central barrier to effective immunotherapy in solid tumors. To address this, we developed a novel gene therapeutic strategy that enables localized remodeling of the TME via tumor-intrinsic cytokine expression. Central to this approach is CancerPAM, a multi-omics bioinformatics pipeline that identifies and ranks patient-specific, tumor-exclusive CRISPR-Cas9 knock-in sites with high specificity and integration efficiency. Using neuroblastoma—a pediatric solid tumor with a suppressive TME—as a model, we applied CancerPAM to sequencing data from cell lines and patients to identify optimal integration sites for pro-inflammatory cytokines (CXCL10, CXCL11, IFNG). CRISPR-mediated CXCL10 knock-in into tumor cells significantly enhanced CAR T cell infiltration and antitumor efficacy both in vitro and in vivo. In vivo, CXCL10expressing tumors showed significantly increased early CAR T cell infiltration and prolonged survival compared to controls. CancerPAM rankings correlated strongly with target-site specificity and knock-in efficiency, validating its predictive performance. Our findings establish CancerPAM as a powerful tool for safe and effective CRISPR-based interventions and provide a conceptual framework for integrating cytokine-driven TME remodeling with cellular immunotherapies. This personalized strategy holds promise for enhancing CAR T cells and other immunotherapies across immune-refractory solid tumors.