Targeted Cellular Micropharmacies: Cells Engineered for Localized Drug Delivery
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Choice of Cells for Targeted Drug Delivery
2.1. Tumor-Infiltrating Lymphocytes
2.2. Engineered T Cells
2.3. NK Cells
2.4. B Cell-Based Cancer Immunotherapy
2.5. iPSC-Based Cancer Immunotherapy
2.6. Macrophage-Based Cancer Immunotherapy
3. Vector Design and Gene Transfer for Engineered Cells
3.1. Multicistronic Vector Design
3.2. Multiple Promoter Systems and Co-Transduction
3.3. Non-Viral Gene Delivery Methods
4. Approaches to Engineering Cells Inside the Patient
4.1. Transposase Delivery
4.2. mRNA Delivery
4.3. Cellular Implants
5. Cellular Delivery of Therapeutic Antibodies and Their Derivatives
5.1. CAR T Cells Secreting Antibodies to PDL-1/PD-1
5.2. CAR T Cells Secreting Antibodies to CTLA4
5.3. Cells that Disrupt the CD47–SIRPα Signaling Axis
5.4. Cellular Delivery of Antibodies Against Tumor-Associated Antigens
6. Delivery of Cellular-Modulating Agents in Cancer
6.1. TCMs Expressing Tumor Suppressor Proteins
6.2. Cytokines in the TME
6.3. Cytokines that Promote T Cell Persistence
6.4. TCMs that Prime Immune Effectors
7. Enzyme Delivery Strategies
8. Cellular Gating Strategies
8.1. Autonomous Gating Systems
8.2. Activation-Dependent Systems
8.3. Activation-Independent Systems
8.4. Remote-Controlled Gating Systems
8.5. Challenges of Gated Systems in TCMs
9. Non-Genetic Engineered TCs
9.1. Intracellular Encapsulation
9.2. Non-Covalent Surface Modifications
9.3. Covalent Membrane Conjugations
10. Additional Considerations and Applications in the Clinical Use of TCMs
10.1. Mesenchymal Stem Cell (MSC)-Based Strategies for Cancer Treatment
10.2. TCM for Autoimmune Disease
10.3. TCM for Neurological Disorders
10.4. Other Disease Targets of TCM
11. Conclusions/Perspectives
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Cell Type | Advantages and Disadvantages | Citations |
---|---|---|
TILs | Patient specific; difficult to obtain; may be highly cancer specific. TCR is typically low affinity. Cells engineered to express IL-2, IL-7, IL-12, IL-15, and IL-18 show enhanced expansion and function; IL-12 secretion produced toxicity. | [11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18] |
TCR engineered T cells | High affinity and specific; patient specific or disease specific. Difficult to make. Mispairing with endogenous TCR and variability of expression are issues. | [19,20] |
CAR T cells | Highly effective with B cell neoplasms. Patient specific, expensive, and sometimes toxic. Already an established carrier of many biologics as “armored CARs”. | [6,21] |
Macrophages | Limited experience to date in secreting drugs. May be difficult to obtain and expand. Can link the innate and adaptive immune response. | [22,23,24] |
B cells | Cells are capable of large protein production. May be difficult to obtain and expand. | [25,26,27,28,29,30,31] |
CIK and NK cells | May be less toxic than T cells. Less GVHD and CRS may allow allogeneic uses. IL-15 armoring prolongs activity. | [32,33,34] |
iPSCs | Off-the-shelf cells are possible. Risks of insertional mutagenesis exist. | [35,36,37,38,39] |
Vector Design or Approach | Advantages and Disadvantages | Citations |
---|---|---|
Multicistronic with 2A peptide or furin cleavage site | Small size. Allows the production of separate proteins from one promotor, but cistrons cannot be differentially regulated. Varied expression on either side of the 2A element. | [74,75] |
Multiple promoters or bicistronic with an IRES site | Large size and often reduced expression of the second product, which may or may not be desired. | [78,79] |
Co-transduction | Efficiencies often low and increases cost and complexity. | [80,81,82] |
Nanoparticle with DNA or RNA for in vivo use | Allows off-the-shelf engineering as cells manipulated in vivo. Size of constructs and persistence may be limiting. RNA may require multiple doses. | [83,84,85] |
Gene editing and transposons. | Allows control of the insertion site, reducing potential adverse effects and controlling expression; reduces TCR misparing. Low efficiency. | [86,87,88,89] |
Implanted polymers for in vivo use | Allows off-the-shelf engineering as cells manipulated in vivo. Limited by access to tumors. Long-term effects of implant unknown. | [90,91,92] |
Gating System | System Type | Logic Decision Made by Cell (Examples) | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Autonomous Gating Systems | Canonical CAR T cell | If antigen, then activate to kill cells. | [174] |
Multiantigen activation | If multiple antigens, then activate to kill cells. | [175] | |
Activation dependent | If activated, then initiate transcription of transgene. | [176] | |
SynNotch | If membrane-bound ligand, then initiate transcription of transgene | [166,177,178] | |
MESA | If soluble ligand, then initiate transcription of transgene. | [179] | |
TME gated | If TME, then do B. | [180,181] | |
iCAR | If off-target ligand, then do not kill cell antigen-positive cells. | [182] | |
Remote-controlled Gating Systems | Kill switch | If drug is present, then end therapy. | [183,184] |
SUPRA CAR and UniCAR | If modular recognition molecule bound to cells, then kill cells. | [185,186] | |
Synthetic receptor/ligand pairs | If drug, then do or do not B. | [187,188,189] | |
Geography restricted | If localized external stimulus, then do B. | [190,191] |
Characteristic | Systemic Drug Delivery | Targeted Cellular Micropharmacy (TCM) |
---|---|---|
Oral or subcutaneous administration | Yes, for many agents. | No. Generally intravenous. |
Off-the-shelf availability; Long-term storage | Yes, for most agents | Generally, not currently, but methods to change this are in development. |
Control of doses and schedule | Yes, but dose at target site can be variable | Limited to cases in which gating or prodrugs are used. |
Systemic toxicity | Often. Can be severe or fatal. | Promises to create less systemic toxicity for the cell-delivered drug. |
Therapeutic index (TI) | Often quite limited, resulting in poor efficacy and systemic toxicity. | Local expansion promises to improve TI. Allows drug secretion at target site only. |
“Logic” or feedback driven actions | No. | “Smart” logic gates engineered into some forms. |
Persistence in body | Typically, hours to days. | Can be days or months to years. |
Reactivation when needed. | No. | Yes. |
Cost | Low to high. | Currently extremely high. |
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Share and Cite
Gardner, T.J.; Bourne, C.M.; Dacek, M.M.; Kurtz, K.; Malviya, M.; Peraro, L.; Silberman, P.C.; Vogt, K.C.; Unti, M.J.; Brentjens, R.; et al. Targeted Cellular Micropharmacies: Cells Engineered for Localized Drug Delivery. Cancers 2020, 12, 2175. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers12082175
Gardner TJ, Bourne CM, Dacek MM, Kurtz K, Malviya M, Peraro L, Silberman PC, Vogt KC, Unti MJ, Brentjens R, et al. Targeted Cellular Micropharmacies: Cells Engineered for Localized Drug Delivery. Cancers. 2020; 12(8):2175. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers12082175
Chicago/Turabian StyleGardner, Thomas J., Christopher M. Bourne, Megan M. Dacek, Keifer Kurtz, Manish Malviya, Leila Peraro, Pedro C. Silberman, Kristen C. Vogt, Mildred J. Unti, Renier Brentjens, and et al. 2020. "Targeted Cellular Micropharmacies: Cells Engineered for Localized Drug Delivery" Cancers 12, no. 8: 2175. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers12082175
APA StyleGardner, T. J., Bourne, C. M., Dacek, M. M., Kurtz, K., Malviya, M., Peraro, L., Silberman, P. C., Vogt, K. C., Unti, M. J., Brentjens, R., & Scheinberg, D. (2020). Targeted Cellular Micropharmacies: Cells Engineered for Localized Drug Delivery. Cancers, 12(8), 2175. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers12082175