Drug-controlled CAR-T cells through the regulation of cell-cell interactions

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Abstract

CAR T-cell therapy is constrained by on-target, off-tumor toxicities as well as cellular exhaustion due to chronic antigen exposure. CARs comprising small-molecule controlled switches can enhance both safety and therapeutic efficacy but are limited by the scarcity of non-immunogenic protein elements responsive to non-immunosuppressive, clinically approved drugs with favorable pharmacodynamics. Here, we combine rational design and library-based optimization of a protein-protein interaction (PPI) of human origin to develop venetoclax-controlled Drug-Regulated Off-switch PPI (DROP)-CARs. DROP-CARs enable dose-dependent release of the tumor-targeting scFv and consequent T-cell dissociation from the target tumor cell. Additionally, we present proof-of-concept for a dual DROP-CAR controlled by different small molecules, as well as for logic-gated synthetic receptors enabling logic-gated STAT3 signaling. We demonstrate in vitro and in vivo function of DROP-CAR T cells and conclude that the approach holds important promise for clinical application.

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