In a study with potentially major implications for the future treatment of autoimmunity and related conditions, scientists from the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania have found a way to remove the subset of
Current therapies for autoimmune disease, such as prednisone and rituximab, suppress large parts of the immune system, leaving patients vulnerable to potentially fatal opportunistic infections and cancers.
The Penn researchers demonstrated their new technique by successfully treating an otherwise fatal autoimmune disease in a mouse model, without apparent
«This is a powerful strategy for targeting just autoimmune cells and sparing the good immune cells that protect us from infection," said
Payne and her
«Our study effectively opens up the application of this
The key element in the new strategy is based on an artificial
The basic CAR T cell concept was first described in the late 1980s, principally as an
B cells, which produce antibodies, can also cause autoimmunity. Payne researches autoimmunity, and a few years ago, a postdoctoral researcher in her laboratory, Christoph T. Ellebrecht, MD, took an interest in CAR T cell technology as a potential weapon against B
«We thought we could adapt this technology that’s really good at killing all B cells in the body to target specifically the B cells that make antibodies that cause autoimmune disease," said Milone.
«Targeting just the cells that cause autoimmunity has been the ultimate goal for therapy in this field," noted Payne.
A more disease-specific receptor
In the new study, for which Ellebrecht was first author, the team took aim at pemphigus vulgaris. This condition occurs when a patient’s antibodies attack molecules that normally keep skin cells together. When left untreated, PV leads to extensive skin blistering and is almost always fatal, but in recent decades the condition has been treatable with broadly immunosuppressive drugs such as prednisone, mycophenolate mofetil, and rituximab.
To treat PV without causing broad immunosuppression, the Penn team designed an artificial
The team developed a «chimeric autoantibody receptor," or CAAR, that displays fragments of the autoantigen Dsg3 — the same fragments to which
Testing many variants, the team eventually found an artificial receptor design that worked well in cell culture, enabling host T cells to efficiently destroy cells producing antibodies to desmoglein, including those derived from PV patients. The engineered T cells also performed successfully in a mouse model of PV, killing
«We were able to show that the treatment killed all the
T cell therapies can be complicated by many factors. But in these experiments, the Penn scientists’ engineered cells maintained their potency despite the presence of
The team now plans to test their treatment in dogs, which can also develop PV and often die from the disease. «If we can use this technology to cure PV safely in dogs, it would be a breakthrough for veterinary medicine, and would hopefully pave the way for trials of this therapy in human pemphigus patients," Payne said.
Also on the horizon for the Penn scientists are applications of CAAR T cell technology for other types of autoimmunity. The immune rejection that complicates organ transplants, and normally requires
«If you can identify a specific marker of a B cell that you want to target, then in principle this strategy can work," Payne said.
Other
Source: http://www.uphs.upenn.edu/news/News_Releases/2016/06/payne/