Natural killer (NK) cells are innate immune cells that play a key role in in tumor immune surveillance. NK cells are self-tolerant to healthy cells and can kill tumor cells in both hematological and solid malignancies. Recent advances allow for the derivation of immune cells, including NK cells, from human induced pluripotent stem cells that can be utilized for cancer immunotherapy. High doses of NK cells (approx. 0.5-5 x 109 cells per dose) and multiple doses are both safe and likely necessary for clinical efficacy. Manufacturing large number of NK cells from a clonal master iPSC line provides a promising strategy to enable next generation, off-the-shelf, affordable, cancer immunotherapies. We have developed a novel process to produce high purity, clinical scale NK cells efficiently and consistently. This method does not require cell sorting or the usage of murine-derived stromal cells. Briefly, hematopoietic progenitor cells are derived using an improved spin embryoid body (EB) method using defined cytokines including bone morphogenic protein-4 (BMP-4), stem cell factor (SCF), vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), fms-like tyrosine kinase 3 (FLT-3) etc. The hematopoietic progenitor cells are subsequently differentiated into mature NK cells using a second set of defined cytokines such as IL-3, IL-7, IL-15, SCF etc. Using this novel method, fully functioning NK cells could be expanded more than 8,000-fold to enable us to produce 1 x 1012 NK cells starting from 1 x 106 undifferentiated iPSCs. This cell production scale can supply >200 clinical doses from one cGMP manufacturing campaign. NK cells produced using this method are CD56-positive and display the typical phenotype of NK cell activating receptors including NKG2D, NKp44, NKp46, DNAM-1. Importantly, these NK cells demonstrate better anti-tumor activities and produce higher levels of IFNγ and TNFα compared to peripheral blood-derived NK cells isolated from healthy donors. Moreover, this protocol has been adapted and optimized for clinical scale manufacturing of NK cells from a genetically engineered iPSC cell line bearing a knock-out of CISH, a key intracellular checkpoint of NK cell activation. CISH KO NK cells produced using this optimized method show significantly better anti-tumor activities against multiple liquid and solid tumor cell lines (Figure 1), including K562, Raji (B cell lymphoma), Daudi (B cell lymphoma), SUP-B15 (B cell lymphoma), MOLT-4 (T cell lymphoma), SKOV-3 (ovarian cancer), OVCAR-4 (ovarian cancer), HCC-827 (lung cancer), ZR-75 (breast cancer), and BT-474 (breast cancer), in standard cytotoxicity assays compared with unmodified NK cells. Overall, this novel cell production strategy paves the way for clinical trials using higher doses of iPSC-derived NK cells with increased potency, thus enabling next-generation CAR-NK cell-based immunotherapies.

Bernareggi:Shoreline Bioscience: Current Employment, Current holder of stock options in a privately-held company. Gonsalves:Shoreline Bioscience: Current Employment, Current holder of stock options in a privately-held company. Schabla:Shoreline Bioscience: Current Employment, Current holder of stock options in a privately-held company. Garate-Carrilo:Shoreline Bioscience: Current Employment, Current holder of stock options in a privately-held company. El-Kalay:Shoreline Bioscience: Current Employment, Current holder of stock options in a privately-held company. Kaufman:VisiCell: Consultancy; Qihan Biotech: Consultancy; Shoreline Bioscience: Current holder of stock options in a privately-held company, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees, Research Funding. Hollingsworth:Shoreline Bioscience: Current Employment, Current holder of stock options in a privately-held company. Zhu:Shoreline Bioscience: Current Employment, Current holder of stock options in a privately-held company.

Author notes

*

Asterisk with author names denotes non-ASH members.

Sign in via your Institution