Adoptive cellular therapies using engineered chimeric antigen receptor T cells (CAR-T cells) are rapidly emerging as a highly effective treatment option for a variety of life-threatening hematological malignancies. Small molecule-mediated modulation of T cell differentiation during the in vitro CAR-T manufacturing process has great potential as a method to optimize the therapeutic potential of cellular immunotherapies. In animal models, T cells with a central or stem memory (TCM/SCM) phenotype display enhanced in vivoefficacy and persistence relative to other T cell subpopulations. We sought to identify small molecules that promote skewing towards a TCM/SCM phenotype during the CAR-T manufacturing process, with associated enhanced viability, expansion and metabolic profiles of the engineered cells. To this end, we developed a high-throughput functional screening platform with primary human T cells using a combination of high-content immunophenotyping and gene expression-based readouts to analyze cells following a high-throughput T cell culture platform that represents a scaled-down model of clinical CAR-T cell production. Multicolor flow cytometry was used to measure expansion, cell viability and the expression levels of cell surface proteins that define TCM cells (e.g., CCR7, CD62L and CD27) and markers of T cell exhaustion (e.g., PD1, LAG3, and TIM3). In parallel, a portion of each sample was evaluated using high content RNA-Seq based gene expression analysis of ~100 genes representing key biological pathways of interest. A variety of known positive and negative control compounds were incorporated into the high-throughput screens to validate the functional assays and to assess the robustness of the 384-well-based screening. The ability to simultaneously correlate small molecule-induced changes in protein and gene expression levels with impacts on cell proliferation and viability of various T cell subsets, enabled us to identify multiple classes of small molecules that favorably enhance the therapeutic properties of CAR-T cells. Consistent with results previously presented by Perkins et al. (ASH, 2015), we identified multiple PI3K inhibitors that could modify expansion of T cells while retaining a TCM/SCM phenotype. In addition, we identified small molecules, and small molecule combinations, that have not been described previously in the literature that could improve CAR-T biology. Several of the top hits from the screens have been evaluated across multiple in vitro (e.g., expansion, viability, CAR expression, serial restimulation/killing, metabolic profiling, and evaluation of exhaustion markers) and in vivo (e.g., mouse tumor models for persistence and killing) assays. Results from the initial screening hits have enabled us to further refine the optimal target profile of a pharmacologically-enhanced CAR-T cell. In addition, we are extending this screening approach to identify small molecules that enhance the trafficking and persistence of CAR-T cells for treating solid tumors. In conclusion, the approach described here identifies unique small molecule modulators that can modify CAR-T cells during in vitro expansion, such that improved profiles can be tracked and selected from screening through in vitro and in vivo functional assays.

Disclosures

Rosen:Fate Therapeutics: Employment, Equity Ownership. Rezner:Fate Therapeutics, Inc: Employment, Equity Ownership. Robbins:Fate Therapeutics: Employment, Equity Ownership. Hardy:Fate Therapeutics: Employment, Equity Ownership. Peralta:Fate Therapeutics: Employment, Equity Ownership. Maine:Fate Therapeutics: Employment, Equity Ownership. Sabouri:Fate Therapeutics: Employment, Equity Ownership. Reynal:Fate Therapeutics: Employment. Truong:Fate Therapeutics: Employment, Equity Ownership. Moreno:Fate Therapeutics, Inc.: Employment, Equity Ownership. Foster:Fate Therapeutics: Employment, Equity Ownership. Borchelt:Fate Therapeutics: Employment, Equity Ownership. Meza:Fate Therapeutics: Employment, Equity Ownership. Thompson:Juno Therapeutics: Employment, Equity Ownership. Fontenot:Juno Therapeutics: Employment, Equity Ownership. Larson:Juno Therapeutics: Employment, Equity Ownership. Mujacic:Juno Therapeutics: Employment, Equity Ownership. Shoemaker:Fate Therapeutics: Employment, Equity Ownership.

Author notes

*

Asterisk with author names denotes non-ASH members.

Sign in via your Institution