回声- car - T细胞:用声音调节免疫

IF 6.8 1区 医学 Q1 MEDICINE, RESEARCH & EXPERIMENTAL
Longwei Liu, Yingxiao Wang
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Previously, we developed the first-generation FUS-CAR, an ultrasound-controllable CAR T platform that significantly improved the safety profile of CAR T therapies by spatially confining activation to the tumour site.<span><sup>4</sup></span> However, we also recognized a limitation: the CAR expression in FUS-CAR T cells was transient and decayed quickly after stimulation which necessary the incorporation of Cre recombinase to enable permeant CAR expression after stimulation. At the same time, our group developed a mammalian cell screening platform for fluorescent biosensor screening and live CAR T cell imaging, which enabled us to dissect endogenous CAR T cell signalling networks with high spatiotemporal resolution.<span><sup>5</sup></span> This insight proved crucial: by mapping the activation dynamics of pathways in CAR T cells engaging tumour antigens, we gained a systems-level understanding of how to harness natural signalling feedback loops to sustain CAR expression.</p><p>The EchoBack CAR design lies the synergy between biophysical control and cellular logic. We first repurposed the high-throughput evolutionary screening platform for promoter screening to identify a highly heat-inducible promoter with minimal basal activity. This promoter is activated specifically when cells are exposed to a short pulse of ultrasound and its generated localized heat (e.g., 43°C for 15 min). The resulting EchoBack-CAR T cells exhibit tightly regulated CAR expression and robustly activated upon ultrasound stimulation at the tumour site. However, achieving durable anti-tumour activity requires more than a transient pulse of expression. We, therefore, incorporated a positive feedback loop into the genetic design. This circuit senses endogenous T cell signalling pathways activated by tumour engagement, specifically NFAT, NF-κB, and cAMP/MAPK pathways, and converts those signals into sustained CAR expression. The result is a synthetic immune cell that amplifies its own activation signal, maintaining cytotoxic function long after the initial FUS trigger without continuous external input.</p><p>This system overcomes a major drawback of traditional inducible CAR designs, where CAR expression quickly decays and is vulnerable to downregulation upon antigen contact. In both 2D co-culture and 3D glioblastoma spheroid models, EchoBack-hGD2CAR T cells demonstrated extended killing efficacy and proliferation compared to standard FUS-CAR T cells. In vivo, EchoBack-CAR T cells achieved potent tumour suppression in both subcutaneous and orthotopic glioblastoma models, with improved mouse survival and no off-tumour toxicity. We further validated this design by applying it to PSMA-targeted CAR T cells for prostate cancer. Here, EchoBack-PSMACAR T cells eradicated tumours with no detectable damage to normal tissues expressing low PSMA levels, such as kidney or small intestine while the standard constitutive CAR T cells did. A bilateral tumour model, with a PSMA<sup>low</sup> distal tumour mimicking healthy tissue, confirmed that EchoBack-CAR T cells activated by FUS eliminated only the intended target while sparing antigen-expressing tissues outside the stimulation zone.</p><p>Mechanistically, single-cell RNA sequencing revealed that EchoBack-CAR T cells adopt a distinct transcriptional profile under chronic antigen exposure. Compared to constitutive CAR T cells, EchoBack cells were enriched in proliferative and cytotoxic CD8+ subsets, with reduced expression of exhaustion markers. Flow cytometry and cytotoxicity assays further confirmed that EchoBack-CAR T cells resist functional decline after repeated tumour stimulation, likely benefiting from intermittent “rest” periods when not externally activated.</p><p>EchoBack-CAR T cells represent a convergence of synthetic immunology, genetic circuit engineering, and physical modulation. 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Priorities include reprogramming T cells to overcome local inhibition, refining ultrasound delivery to reduce thermal impact, and implementing closed-loop systems for real-time, feedback-controlled stimulation. These innovations will be critical to enhancing the safety, precision and robustness of EchoBack CAR-T cell therapies. 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At the same time, our group developed a mammalian cell screening platform for fluorescent biosensor screening and live CAR T cell imaging, which enabled us to dissect endogenous CAR T cell signalling networks with high spatiotemporal resolution.<span><sup>5</sup></span> This insight proved crucial: by mapping the activation dynamics of pathways in CAR T cells engaging tumour antigens, we gained a systems-level understanding of how to harness natural signalling feedback loops to sustain CAR expression.</p><p>The EchoBack CAR design lies the synergy between biophysical control and cellular logic. We first repurposed the high-throughput evolutionary screening platform for promoter screening to identify a highly heat-inducible promoter with minimal basal activity. This promoter is activated specifically when cells are exposed to a short pulse of ultrasound and its generated localized heat (e.g., 43°C for 15 min). The resulting EchoBack-CAR T cells exhibit tightly regulated CAR expression and robustly activated upon ultrasound stimulation at the tumour site. However, achieving durable anti-tumour activity requires more than a transient pulse of expression. We, therefore, incorporated a positive feedback loop into the genetic design. This circuit senses endogenous T cell signalling pathways activated by tumour engagement, specifically NFAT, NF-κB, and cAMP/MAPK pathways, and converts those signals into sustained CAR expression. The result is a synthetic immune cell that amplifies its own activation signal, maintaining cytotoxic function long after the initial FUS trigger without continuous external input.</p><p>This system overcomes a major drawback of traditional inducible CAR designs, where CAR expression quickly decays and is vulnerable to downregulation upon antigen contact. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

尽管嵌合抗原受体T细胞(CAR - T)治疗血液系统恶性肿瘤取得了变革性的成功,但将这种模式扩展到实体肿瘤已被证明是困难的。靶外肿瘤毒性、抗原异质性、T细胞耗竭和细胞持久性差等主要障碍限制了实体瘤的临床转化。1,2在我们最近的研究中,我们提出了EchoBack-CAR - T细胞,这是一种新的合成生物学平台,将遗传电路工程与聚焦超声(FUS)控制相结合,以一种非侵入性、时空可调的策略来解决这些核心限制。这项工作建立在我们团队在合成免疫学、T细胞生物学和基于声音的物理调制的界面上的努力之上。此前,我们开发了第一代FUS-CAR,这是一种超声可控的CAR - T平台,通过将激活空间限制在肿瘤部位,显着提高了CAR - T疗法的安全性然而,我们也认识到一个局限性:CAR在FUS-CAR T细胞中的表达是短暂的,并且在刺激后迅速衰减,这需要结合Cre重组酶来实现刺激后的渗透CAR表达。同时,我们的团队开发了一个哺乳动物细胞筛选平台,用于荧光生物传感器筛选和活CAR - T细胞成像,这使我们能够以高时空分辨率解剖内源性CAR - T细胞信号网络这一见解被证明是至关重要的:通过绘制CAR - T细胞中与肿瘤抗原结合的通路的激活动力学,我们获得了如何利用自然信号反馈回路来维持CAR表达的系统级理解。EchoBack CAR的设计是生物物理控制和细胞逻辑之间的协同作用。我们首先将高通量进化筛选平台重新用于启动子筛选,以鉴定具有最低基础活性的高度热诱导启动子。当细胞暴露于短脉冲超声波及其产生的局部热量(例如43°C 15分钟)时,该启动子被特异性激活。由此产生的EchoBack-CAR - T细胞表现出严格调节的CAR表达,并在超声刺激肿瘤部位时被强烈激活。然而,实现持久的抗肿瘤活性需要的不仅仅是短暂的表达脉冲。因此,我们在基因设计中加入了一个正反馈回路。该回路感知由肿瘤参与激活的内源性T细胞信号通路,特别是NFAT、NF-κB和cAMP/MAPK通路,并将这些信号转化为持续的CAR表达。其结果是合成的免疫细胞可以放大自身的激活信号,在初始FUS触发后很长一段时间内保持细胞毒性功能,而无需持续的外部输入。该系统克服了传统诱导型CAR设计的一个主要缺点,即CAR表达迅速衰减,并且在抗原接触时容易下调。在2D共培养和3D胶质母细胞瘤球形模型中,与标准的FUS-CAR - T细胞相比,EchoBack-hGD2CAR - T细胞表现出更长的杀伤效果和增殖能力。在体内,EchoBack-CAR - T细胞在皮下和原位胶质母细胞瘤模型中都实现了有效的肿瘤抑制,提高了小鼠存活率,并且没有肿瘤外毒性。我们通过将其应用于psma靶向的前列腺癌CAR - T细胞进一步验证了这一设计。在这里,EchoBack-PSMACAR T细胞根除肿瘤,对表达低PSMA水平的正常组织(如肾脏或小肠)没有可检测到的损伤,而标准组成型CAR - T细胞则有。一个双侧肿瘤模型,psmall远端肿瘤模拟健康组织,证实了被FUS激活的EchoBack-CAR - T细胞只消除了预期的靶标,而保留了刺激区外表达抗原的组织。从机制上讲,单细胞RNA测序显示,在慢性抗原暴露下,EchoBack-CAR - T细胞采用不同的转录谱。与组成型CAR - T细胞相比,EchoBack细胞在增殖和细胞毒性CD8+亚群中富集,而衰竭标志物的表达减少。流式细胞术和细胞毒性实验进一步证实,在反复的肿瘤刺激后,EchoBack-CAR - T细胞抵抗功能下降,可能受益于非外部激活的间歇性“休息”期。EchoBack-CAR - T细胞代表了合成免疫学、基因电路工程和物理调制的融合。这个平台提供了实体肿瘤CAR治疗长期缺乏的东西:空间精度、时间控制和可编程持久性,而不牺牲效力。EchoBack CAR平台是模块化的,易于适应多种抗原,在不牺牲安全性的情况下实现更广泛的靶向。除了CARs,同样的逻辑也可以扩展到共表达的转基因,如检查点抑制剂、细胞因子或重编程工具。 我们展望了肿瘤以外的应用,包括自身免疫、基因编辑和再生医学,这些领域需要远程、可逆的基因控制。随着肿瘤细胞在治疗压力下进化,未来的工程必须解决抗原逃逸和免疫抑制肿瘤微环境等挑战。优先事项包括重新编程T细胞以克服局部抑制,改进超声传递以减少热影响,以及实现实时闭环系统,反馈控制刺激。这些创新对于增强EchoBack CAR-T细胞疗法的安全性、精确性和稳健性至关重要。展望未来,我们设想超声引导细胞疗法将成为下一代精准免疫疗法的核心平台。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
EchoBack-CAR T cells: Tuning immunity with sound

Despite the transformative success of chimeric antigen receptor T cell (CAR T) therapy in hematologic malignancies, extending this paradigm to solid tumours has proven difficult. Major barriers such as on-target off-tumour toxicity, antigen heterogeneity, T cell exhaustion, and poor cell persistence have limited clinical translation in solid tumours.1, 2 In our recent study, we present EchoBack-CAR T cells, a novel synthetic biology platform that integrates genetic circuit engineering with focused ultrasound (FUS) control, to address these core limitations with a non-invasive, spatiotemporally tunable strategy.3

This work builds on our team's efforts at the interface of synthetic immunology, T cell biology and physical modulation based on sound. Previously, we developed the first-generation FUS-CAR, an ultrasound-controllable CAR T platform that significantly improved the safety profile of CAR T therapies by spatially confining activation to the tumour site.4 However, we also recognized a limitation: the CAR expression in FUS-CAR T cells was transient and decayed quickly after stimulation which necessary the incorporation of Cre recombinase to enable permeant CAR expression after stimulation. At the same time, our group developed a mammalian cell screening platform for fluorescent biosensor screening and live CAR T cell imaging, which enabled us to dissect endogenous CAR T cell signalling networks with high spatiotemporal resolution.5 This insight proved crucial: by mapping the activation dynamics of pathways in CAR T cells engaging tumour antigens, we gained a systems-level understanding of how to harness natural signalling feedback loops to sustain CAR expression.

The EchoBack CAR design lies the synergy between biophysical control and cellular logic. We first repurposed the high-throughput evolutionary screening platform for promoter screening to identify a highly heat-inducible promoter with minimal basal activity. This promoter is activated specifically when cells are exposed to a short pulse of ultrasound and its generated localized heat (e.g., 43°C for 15 min). The resulting EchoBack-CAR T cells exhibit tightly regulated CAR expression and robustly activated upon ultrasound stimulation at the tumour site. However, achieving durable anti-tumour activity requires more than a transient pulse of expression. We, therefore, incorporated a positive feedback loop into the genetic design. This circuit senses endogenous T cell signalling pathways activated by tumour engagement, specifically NFAT, NF-κB, and cAMP/MAPK pathways, and converts those signals into sustained CAR expression. The result is a synthetic immune cell that amplifies its own activation signal, maintaining cytotoxic function long after the initial FUS trigger without continuous external input.

This system overcomes a major drawback of traditional inducible CAR designs, where CAR expression quickly decays and is vulnerable to downregulation upon antigen contact. In both 2D co-culture and 3D glioblastoma spheroid models, EchoBack-hGD2CAR T cells demonstrated extended killing efficacy and proliferation compared to standard FUS-CAR T cells. In vivo, EchoBack-CAR T cells achieved potent tumour suppression in both subcutaneous and orthotopic glioblastoma models, with improved mouse survival and no off-tumour toxicity. We further validated this design by applying it to PSMA-targeted CAR T cells for prostate cancer. Here, EchoBack-PSMACAR T cells eradicated tumours with no detectable damage to normal tissues expressing low PSMA levels, such as kidney or small intestine while the standard constitutive CAR T cells did. A bilateral tumour model, with a PSMAlow distal tumour mimicking healthy tissue, confirmed that EchoBack-CAR T cells activated by FUS eliminated only the intended target while sparing antigen-expressing tissues outside the stimulation zone.

Mechanistically, single-cell RNA sequencing revealed that EchoBack-CAR T cells adopt a distinct transcriptional profile under chronic antigen exposure. Compared to constitutive CAR T cells, EchoBack cells were enriched in proliferative and cytotoxic CD8+ subsets, with reduced expression of exhaustion markers. Flow cytometry and cytotoxicity assays further confirmed that EchoBack-CAR T cells resist functional decline after repeated tumour stimulation, likely benefiting from intermittent “rest” periods when not externally activated.

EchoBack-CAR T cells represent a convergence of synthetic immunology, genetic circuit engineering, and physical modulation. This platform delivers what solid tumour CAR therapy has long lacked: spatial precision, temporal control, and programmable persistence, without sacrificing potency. The EchoBack CAR platform is modular and readily adaptable to diverse antigens, enabling broader targeting without sacrificing safety. In addition to CARs, the same logic could be extended to co-expressed transgenes, such as checkpoint inhibitors, cytokines, or reprogramming tools.6 We envision applications beyond oncology, including autoimmunity, gene editing and regenerative medicine, where remote, reversible gene control is needed.

As tumour cells evolve under therapeutic pressure, future engineering must address challenges such as antigen escape and the immunosuppressive tumour microenvironment. Priorities include reprogramming T cells to overcome local inhibition, refining ultrasound delivery to reduce thermal impact, and implementing closed-loop systems for real-time, feedback-controlled stimulation. These innovations will be critical to enhancing the safety, precision and robustness of EchoBack CAR-T cell therapies. Looking ahead, we envision ultrasound-guided cellular therapies becoming a core platform in the next generation of precision immunotherapy.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
15.90
自引率
1.90%
发文量
450
审稿时长
4 weeks
期刊介绍: Clinical and Translational Medicine (CTM) is an international, peer-reviewed, open-access journal dedicated to accelerating the translation of preclinical research into clinical applications and fostering communication between basic and clinical scientists. It highlights the clinical potential and application of various fields including biotechnologies, biomaterials, bioengineering, biomarkers, molecular medicine, omics science, bioinformatics, immunology, molecular imaging, drug discovery, regulation, and health policy. With a focus on the bench-to-bedside approach, CTM prioritizes studies and clinical observations that generate hypotheses relevant to patients and diseases, guiding investigations in cellular and molecular medicine. The journal encourages submissions from clinicians, researchers, policymakers, and industry professionals.
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