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Natural Killer Cell as Effectors in Chimeric Antigen Receptor Based Immunotherapies for Cancer

Recent developments in the expansion and manipulation of primary NK cells has allowed this source of effective anti-tumour cells to be exploited for cell-based cancer immunotherapies. While ex vivo expanded primary NK cells are highly effective in the treatment of haematological malignancies, their efficacy against the solid tumour has been limited due to the presence of immune-regulatory factors in the tumour microenvironment. These factors can abrogate NK cell function by down regulating the expression of NK activating receptors, thus preventing these highly cytotoxic effector cells from activating in response to tumour challenge. Our work explores whether the expression of a tumour specific chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) on ex vivo expanded primary NK cells would allow the lost activatory signalling to be recouped, and regain their efficacy against the solid tumour.
Unfortunately, the use of primary NK cells as effectors in CAR based cell immunotherapies has been hampered by the technical limitations of producing large numbers of CAR positive primary NK cells. This has led many researchers to utilise the NK-92 cell line instead of primary cells. We demonstrate that ex vivo expanded primary CAR NK cells can be produced efficiently and demonstrate higher anti-tumour functionality than CAR NK-92.
Finally, due to the intricacies of NK cell biology, they are able to effectively discriminate between healthy and malignant targets thus preventing their cytotoxic function from being directed towards the incorrect target. This could be a key advantage in the use of primary NK cells over T cells as effectors of CAR as the off-tumour/on-target adverse effects seen with CAR T cells has severely hampered this clinical strategy. We have shown that CAR T cells but not CAR NK cells are reactive towards phenotypically non-malignant, clinically relevant, healthy cells expressing the CAR target. / Thesis / Master of Science (MSc)

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:mcmaster.ca/oai:macsphere.mcmaster.ca:11375/23815
Date January 2019
CreatorsHogg, Richard Thomas
ContributorsAshkar, Ali, Medical Sciences
Source SetsMcMaster University
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis

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