Abstract Background: The tremendous success of chimeric antigen receptor-T (CAR-T) cell therapy in haematological malignancies has not been recapitulated in solid tumours, owing to tumour-induced immunosuppression, tumour heterogeneity and inefficient tumour trafficking. One promising solution includes “armouring” CAR-T cells with therapeutic transgenes. Indeed, we demonstrated that CAR-T cells engineered to express dendritic cell growth factor Flt3L could effectively engage host anti-tumour immunity crucial for overcoming antigen-negative relapse1. However, synthetic promoters have demonstrated insufficiencies in driving tumour-restricted cytokine expression, which had caused systemic toxicities and trial termination2. The advent of CRISPR/Cas9 gene-editing tool has enabled the precise engineering of CAR-T cells for safety and efficacy enhancements. We previously showed that CRISPR/Cas9-mediated knock-out (KO) of immunosuppressive gene A2AR enhanced CAR-T cell function3. Now, we aim to exploit a CRISPR/Cas9-mediated knock-in (KI) strategy to leverage endogenous gene regulatory elements to restrict transgene expression to tumour for enhanced safety and efficacy. Methods: Genome-wide RNA sequencing was performed on CAR-T cells isolated from tumours and spleens of mice. 27 genes upregulated in intratumoural relative to splenic CAR-T cells were identified as potential KI sites. As KI disrupts target gene expression, the impact of each gene KO on CAR-T cell function/phenotype was first assessed. 7 genes without adverse impact following KO had GFP knocked in. Results: NR4A2 and RGS16 emerged as tumour-specific promoters upon KI. While NR4A2 was highly tumour-restricted and could deliver highly toxic cytokines (e. g. , IL-12) without inducing toxicities in mice, RGS16 had high intratumoural expression and could mediate the efficacy of less potent cytokines (e. g. , IL-2). Conclusions: Endogenous tumour-specific promoters enabled the generation of IL-12- and IL-2-expressing CAR-T cells with enhanced safety and efficacy in syngeneic and xenogeneic mouse models that was concomitant with improved CAR-T cell polyfunctionality and activation of host anti-tumour immunity. Notably, this CRISPR-KI strategy was applicable using patient-derived CAR-T cells, demonstrating its clinical translatability. Citation Format: Kah Min Yap, Amanda X. Y. Chen, Imran G. House, Phillip K. Darcy and Paul A. Beavis. Identifying Optimal Tumour-specific Promoters for CRISPR/Cas9 Engineering of Armoured CAR T Cells with Enhanced Safety and Efficacy abstract. In: Proceedings of Frontiers in Cancer Science 2024; 2024 Nov 13-15; Singapore. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2025;85 (15Suppl): Abstract nr LT01.
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Kah Min Yap
The University of Melbourne
Amanda X. Y. Chen
The University of Melbourne
Imran G. House
The University of Melbourne
Cancer Research
The University of Melbourne
Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre
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Yap et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/68c1a5ff54b1d3bfb60e0279 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1158/1538-7445.fcs2024-lt01
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