In this issue of Blood, Legut et al have tackled a major scientific challenge relating to T-cell engineering, with an unexpected outcome. They have demonstrated that CRISPR-mediated knockout of the native T-cell receptor (TCR) β chain dramatically improves the expression of inserted therapeutic αβ and γδ TCRs in comparison with the same TCRs inserted without endogenous TCR-β chain knockout. Although insertion of TCRs or chimeric antigen receptors (CARs) into the TCR locus has been reported previously, the significant improvement in functional avidity of TCR modified T cells shown here is novel.1 

Gene and cell therapy has arrived in the mainstream. With the recent US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval of 2 genetically engineered T-cell products, tisagenlecleucel (Kymriah)2  and axicabtagene ciloleucel (Yescarta),3  cellular immunotherapy is finally coming of age. Gene-engineered T cells are one of the “newest kids on the block,” and they are generating much excitement. However, CD19-specific CAR T cells are the tip of an enormous iceberg. Following behind in early-phase clinical trials are second- and third-generation products and a growing number of TCR gene-modified T cells, all designed to improve both efficacy and safety profiles. Although CAR recognition is limited to cell surface structures, TCR can recognize intracellular proteins. This not only expands the range of tumor-associated self-antigens that are amenable to T-cell therapy, but it also allows TCR targeting of the cancer mutagenome,4  which may be more important when targeting solid tumors.

Autologous T cells isolated from the peripheral T-cell repertoire are the starting material for most engineered T-cell products. These T cells express their own endogenous TCRs (either αβTCR or γδTCR heterodimers) with a predetermined antigen specificity. Upon introduction of an additional therapeutic TCR, there is competition with the endogenous TCR for self-surface expression. During TCR assembly within the endoplasmic reticulum, both endogenous and therapeutic TCR chains are available for assembly into the αβTCR-CD3 complex prior to transport to the cell surface. Cell surface expression of hybrid TCRs due to mispairing of endogenous α and therapeutic/introduced β TCR chains or vice versa (so-called mixed TCR dimers) may therefore occur.

As Legut et al point out in the introduction to their article, a TCR-transduced T cell therefore has the potential to express four distinct TCRs, only one of which is desired. Mixed TCR dimers can exhibit unpredictable, and potentially dangerous, target specificities. Although clinical trials have not yet demonstrated toxicity due to TCR mispairing, it is clear from murine model experiments that it can cause severe graft-versus-host disease–like pathology.5,6  A number of strategies are being explored to optimize expression of the therapeutic TCR and reduce mispairing, including the provision of additional CD3,7  the modification of TCR sequences to enhance expression, and knockdown of the endogenous TCR.

The ability to knock down or suppress the endogenous TCR repertoire during the process of T-cell engineering to redirect antigen specificity is important to (a) increase expression of introduced TCR, (b) reduce risk of TCR mispairing and thus generation of T cells with unknown and potentially autoreactive specificities, and (c) permit the safe use of third-party or allogeneic T-cell donors (relevant for both CAR and TCR engineering).8 

Meet the other “new kids on the block”: gene editing tools such as CRISPR-Cas9, TALENs, and MegaTAL nucleases, which are all being evaluated for their ability to reliably and efficiently edit primary human T cells. In this issue of Blood, Legut et al describe a strategy to simultaneously knock down the endogenous TCR-β chain in recipient T cells using CRISPR/Cas9 technology while transducing a cancer-reactive TCR of choice.4 

There have been several previously reported attempts to combine endogenous TCR knockout, using zinc finger nucleases,9  transcription activator-like effector nucleases,8  or CRISPR/Cas9,10  with redirecting the T cells to cancer, in most cases via CARs. Others have used targeted insertion of a CAR into the TCR α locus and demonstrated improved function of the engineered T cell.

However, this article goes further in demonstrating that the cell surface expression of introduced antigen-specific TCRs (αβTCR or γδTCR) can be significantly enhanced by the simultaneous disruption of the endogenous TCR-β chain, in comparison with the expression levels achieved for the same TCRs inserted without endogenous TCR-β chain knockout. This “TCR replacement” strategy translated to an enhancement of in vitro function assessed by CD107 expression, interferon γ, and tumor necrosis factor α secretion.

The subsequent focus of this article was on therapeutic γδTCRs. The γδTCR as a cancer-reactive reagent has a number of potential advantages over the αβTCR, including no requirement for HLA restriction and γδTCR targets that are expressed by a broad range of cancers. The authors successfully redirected primary T cells with a pancancer-reactive γδTCR (γδ20) in combination with endogenous TCR-β knockout and again demonstrated that removal of the endogenous TCR-β chain led to a striking increase of surface expression of the γδ20 TCR and also increased peptide sensitivity by several orders of magnitude.

Widespread clinical application of gene-editing technology is just around the corner, as is demonstrated by the recent success of the off-the-shelf allogeneic CAR19 T cells in inducing remission of B-ALL in an infant.8  Just as we become comfortable with the idea of prescribing our patients gene-engineered cell products, we are already looking to the future, where combinations of gene engineering and gene editing are predicted to optimize the function and safety of a cellular product.

Conflict-of-interest disclosure: The author receives research funding from Cell Medica and provides consultancy for GSK.

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