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Pooled Knockin Targeting for Genome Engineering of Cellular Immunotherapies.

Citation
Roth, T. L., et al. “Pooled Knockin Targeting For Genome Engineering Of Cellular Immunotherapies.”. Cell, pp. 728-744.e21.
Author Theodore L Roth, Jonathan Li, Franziska Blaeschke, Jasper F Nies, Ryan Apathy, Cody Mowery, Ruby Yu, Michelle L T Nguyen, Youjin Lee, Anna Truong, Joseph Hiatt, David Wu, David N Nguyen, Daniel Goodman, Jeffrey A Bluestone, Chun Jimmie Ye, Kole Roybal, Eric Shifrut, Alexander Marson
Keywords CRISPR, cell therapy, human T cell, knockins, pooled screen, single-cell RNA-seq
Abstract

Adoptive transfer of genetically modified immune cells holds great promise for cancer immunotherapy. CRISPR knockin targeting can improve cell therapies, but more high-throughput methods are needed to test which knockin gene constructs most potently enhance primary cell functions in vivo. We developed a widely adaptable technology to barcode and track targeted integrations of large non-viral DNA templates and applied it to perform pooled knockin screens in primary human T cells. Pooled knockin of dozens of unique barcoded templates into the T cell receptor (TCR)-locus revealed gene constructs that enhanced fitness in vitro and in vivo. We further developed pooled knockin sequencing (PoKI-seq), combining single-cell transcriptome analysis and pooled knockin screening to measure cell abundance and cell state ex vivo and in vivo. This platform nominated a novel transforming growth factor β (TGF-β) R2-41BB chimeric receptor that improved solid tumor clearance. Pooled knockin screening enables parallelized re-writing of endogenous genetic sequences to accelerate discovery of knockin programs for cell therapies.

Year of Publication
2020
Journal
Cell
Volume
181
Issue
3
Number of Pages
728-744.e21
Date Published
04/2020
ISSN Number
1097-4172
DOI
10.1016/j.cell.2020.03.039
Alternate Journal
Cell
PMID
32302591
PMCID
PMC7219528
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