ORIGINAL RESEARCH

Chimeric antigen receptor expression in natural killer cell line NK-92 by transduction with lentiviral particles pseudotyped with the surface glycoproteins of the measles virus vaccine strain

About authors

Group of structural Organization of T-cell Immunity, Department of Adaptive Immunity Genomics, Shemyakin and Ovchinnikov Institute of Bioorganic Chemistry, Moscow

Correspondence should be addressed: Stepan P. Chumakov
Miklouho-Maclay 16/10, Moscow, 117997; moc.liamg@lukhtah

About paper

Funding: this work was funded by MESR (project code RFMEFI60716X0156).

Received: 2018-11-27 Accepted: 2018-12-20 Published online: 2018-12-31
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Cellular immunotherapy is one of the key areas of development of modern oncology. By introducing into the patient’s bloodstream the immune cells that target tumor antigens it may be possible to achieve high specificity of action and treatment efficacy, with a low incidence of undesirable effects [1]. In research and clinical trials, the most frequent vehicle is the patient's own cytotoxic T-lymphocytes with induced specificity for a particular tumor antigen or their combination. These modifications are performed by expressing a chimeric antigen receptor (CAR), consisting of several intracellular signaling domains for T-lymphocyte activation and an extracellular region that recognizes a tumor antigen [2]. For the introduction of constructs expressing CAR, chemical transfection of cells [3], electroporation [4], or transduction with viral vectors [5] is used most frequently. After transduction, the cell population can be expanded in culture to obtain the required number of cells. Treatment regimens based on CAR-T cells demonstrate good clinical efficacy, but the cost of therapy is often extremely high, which is due to the requirement for production of a personalized T-cell population for each patient. Another factor which constrains the prospects for the massive adoption of CAR-T cells in clinical practice is the limited availability of the patient's own T-lymphocytes in patients with late stages of cancer. It is possible to overcome these drawbacks, but this will require a significant improvement in the field of cell culturing and production.

Natural killer cell lines that carry chimeric antigen receptors may be considered as a less expensive, universal and more affordable alternative than CAR-T cell preparations. Out of 11 established and widely available natural killer lines that were obtained from patients with various lymphoproliferative diseases, only two — KHYG-1 [6] and NK-92 [7] — have a pronounced ability to suppress the growth of tumor cells due to intrinsic cytotoxic activity, in the absence of expression of Fc receptors [8]. Both cell lines are able to proliferate in the presence of IL2 in the culture medium, NK-92, in particular, was shown to be able to selectively destroy K-562 lymphoma cells cultured in a mixture with normal peripheral mononuclear cells. NK-92 cells were also able to maintain cytotoxicity after gamma irradiation with a dose of 10 Gray, without being proliferatively active, which allows them to be used for the treatment of cancer [9].

To enhance the cytotoxic properties of NK-92, genetically modified variants have been created that express either their own IL2, IL15 [10]; or additional receptors — CD16, for targeting tumor cells with antibodies, or CAR, for direct recognition of tumor antigens [11]. Functionally, CAR-expressing NK-92 are similar to CAR-T cells, while the cost of therapy may be substantially reduced — the cell line can be expanded in bulk quantities; and preliminary procedures for treating a patient will consist only in defrosting the ready-to-use aliquot [12]. In addition to being used for therapy, NK-92 cells can serve as a platform for testing and development of various types of chimeric receptors in vitro and in vivo. The main obstacle while manipulating with cells of this line is its sensitivity to cultivation conditions, as well as high resistance to lentiviral transduction: viral vectors pseudotyped with VSV G-protein do not efficiently transduce NK-92 cells, and as the amount of viral particles in the medium increases, the cells quickly lose viability [13]. For lentiviral transduction of peripheral T-lymphocytes and immune cells of myeloid lineage, lentiviral vector particles pseudotyped with surface glycoproteins of the measles virus vaccine strain have been recently developed [14]. Compared to conventional lentiviral vectors pseudotyped with VSV G-protein, they have shown to posess much higher ability to transduce immune cells without either stimulating cell division, or changing their phenotype or the profile of secreted cytokines [15]. The aim of this work was to determine the efficicacy of transduction of NK- 92 cells with lentiviruses, pseudotyped F and H glycoproteins of the measles virus, as well as to determine the conditions for isolation and purification of NK-92 cells transduced with a chimeric receptor directed against the CD20 antigen, and to assess their cytotoxic potential.

METHODS

Plasmids and constructs

For packaging of lentiviral vectors, pseudotyped with VSV-G, packaging plasmids psPAX2 (contains lentiviral structural proteins) and pMD2-G (encodes VSV G-protein) were used. Both plasmids were kindly provided by Didier Trono (Addgene plasmid # 12260; http://n2t.net/addgene:12260; RRID: Addgene_12260 and Addgene plasmid # 12259; http://n2t.net/addgene:12259; RRID: Addgene_12259). For pseudotyping with measles glycoproteins, instead of pMD2-G, the plasmid pMD2-FΔ30 was used, which encodes a fragment of the F protein of the measles virus of the ESC vaccine strain with a cytoplasmic domain truncated by 30 amino acids. For preparation of measles virus cDNA and subsequent amplification of target genome fragment by PCR, were used primers Fdelta30 dir EcoRI (AGAGGAATTCACCACCATGTCCATCATGGGTCTCAAGGTGAACGTCTCTG) and Fdelta30 rev EcoRI (AGAGAGAATTCTCAACGCCCCCTGCAGCAACATATTAAAGCG), cloning was performed to the vector pMD2-G by EcoRI sites. In combination with pMD2-FΔ30, the plasmid pCG-HcΔ18 was used, provided by Jacob Reiser (Addgene plasmid # 84817; http://n2t.net/addgene:84817; RRID: Addgene_84817), as well as its variants, with truncation of 24 N-terminal amino acids of the H protein (pCG-HcΔ24), or with addition of 4 alanine residues (pCG-4AHcΔ24). The plasmids were produced by cloning the original H protein fragment amplified with primers Hd24 BamHI dir (AGAGAGGGATCCAGGGTGCAAGATCATCCACAATGAACCGGGAGCACCTGATG) and H rev (CTGATGTCTATTTCACACTAGTACAAAC), or with primers Hd24 4a BamHI dir (AGAGAGGGATCCAGGGTGCA AGATCATCCACAATGGCCGCTGCAGCCAACCGGGAGCACCTGATG) and H rev, respectively, by restriction sites BamHI and SpeI. Lentiviral vectors pLCMV-tagRFP-puro (containing sequence of red fluorescent protein tagRFP (Evrogen; Russia) under the control of a cytomegalovirus promoter) and pLSF-@ CD20-229-tagRFP containing the sequence of 3-rd gen chimeric receptor against the surface antigen CD20 (CD8 leader peptide, ScFv from HB-9645 hybridoma clone, DYKDDDDK epitope, 229 amino acid linker region, CD28 transmembrane domain, and CD28, CD137, and CD3z signaling domains) and tagRFP, with polycistronic expression using the T2A signal sequence under the control of the SFFV promoter.

Cell cultures

For lentivirus packaging, the HEK-293T cell line was used, cells were cultured in DMEM-F12 (PAA; Austrian) medium with addition of fetal calf serum up to 10%, 2 mM alanyl-glutamine (PanEco; Russia), 20 mM HEPES and 100 μg/ml penicillin and streptomycin.
Cultivation of NK-92 was carried out in RPMI-1640 medium (PAA; Austrian) with the addition of fetal calf serum and horse serum up to 20% in equal proportions, 2 mM alanyl-glutamine (PanEco; Russia), 20 mM HEPES, 0.2 mM inositol, 0.1 mM 2-mercaptoethanol, 1 μM water-soluble hydrocortisone (Sigma; SA), 20 μM folic acid and recombinant IL2 at a final concentration of 100 μg/ml.
Raji cells (Burkitt's lymphoma) (ATCC; USA) expressing GFP fluorescent protein were used as targets for CAR-expressing NK-92 cells. The cells were cultivated in RPMI-1640 medium (PanEco; Russia) with the addition of fetal calf serum up to 10%, 2 mM alanyl-glutamine (PanEco; Russia), 20 mM HEPES and 100 μg/ml penicillin and streptomycin. All cells were cultured in 5% CO2 conditions at 37 °C.

Transfection and viral transduction

Transfection was carried out on 6-well plates in OptiMEM medium (Invitrogen; USA) using polyethyleneimine 25kDA (PEI-25, Polysciences; USA) on HEK-293T cells at 40–60% confluence seeded the day before the procedure.
For lentiviral vectors pseudotyped with VSV-G, a mixture of the following plasmids was prepared: pLCMV-tagRFP-puro containing marker protein (1.5 μg), psPAX2 (0.9 μg) and pMD2-G (0.6 μg) in the ratio of 5 : 3 : 2, respectively. For pseudotyping with measles glycoproteins, plasmids pLCMV-tagRFP-puro or pLSF-@CD20-229-tagRFP (0.9 μg), psPAX2 (0.9 μg), pMD2-FΔ30 (0.79 μg), pCG-HcΔ18 (0.11 µg) or its variations pCG-HcΔ24 (0.11 µg) and pCG-4AHcΔ24 (0.11 µg) were used in a ratio of 8 : 8 : 7 : 1. After a three-hour incubation of the cells with the transfection mixture, the medium was replaced with RPMI-1640 containing the serum replacement (Serum Replacement Solution, PeproTech; USA), 2 mM alanyl-glutamine (PanEco; Russia), 20 mM HEPES and 4 mM caffeine, in which HEK-293T were incubated for 24 hours for the production of viral particles. Viral transduction was performed for 8–12 hours on NK-92 cells in the concentration of at least 5 • 105 per ml. Polybrene at a concentration of 8 μg/ml and all required supplements for the cultivation of NK- 92 cells, as well as BX795 at a concentration of 3 μM, were added to the medium containing the virus upon infection. After transduction, the medium was replaced with complete NK-92 culture medium. The result of the transduction was assesed after 48 hours. Infectious viral titers and transduction efficiency were determined using a flow cytometer by evaluating the tagRFP positive fraction.

Cytotoxicity assay

To assess cytotoxicity, NK-92 cells were mixed with Raji cells expressing GFP in different ratios. After co-cultivation for 48 hours, the proportion and number of GFP positive cells were assessed on a flow cytometer.

RESULTS

Determination of the optimal ratio of packaging plasmids

To assess the efficiency of transduction of NK-92 cells, preparations of lentiviral vector particles pseudotyped with VSV G-protein or three different variants of measles virus H protein in combination with F protein (H/F pseudotyped) were used. Several authors reported controversial information on the optimal ratio of packaging plasmids, required to obtain highest viral titers [1519]. The known ratios as well as the ratios extrapolated from the VSV-G pseudotyped lentiviral vectors used for packaging (5 : 3 : 2 for the vector : psPAX2: pMD2-G) were used to repare lentiviral stocks and then determine infectious titers (fig. 1). Results showed that plasmid ratios of 8 : 8 : 7 : 1 and 15 : 9 : 2 : 1 for the pLCMV-tagRFP-puro : psPAX2 : pMD2-Fd30 : pCG-HΔ18 vectors showed the most efficient packaging of lentiviral particles for the H protein variant Δ18. For all further experiments, the ratio 8 : 8 : 7 : 1 was used.

Comparison of variants of protein H

A characteristic feature of pseudotyping with H/F proteins is the formation of syncytia in the culture of packaging cells. The length of the cytoplasmic tails of proteins H and F directly affects the intensity of this process, and the lesser syncytia is formed, the longer the packaging cells may be used to collect lentiviral supernatants. Excessive truncation of the cytoplasmic tails leads to a sharp drop in the infectious titers. The founding work on this topic reports that the variant of the HΔ18 protein in combination with the FΔ30 protein produces lentiviral vector stocks with highest transfection titer, while shortening to HΔ24 almost completely suppresses the production of the infectious virus, and the addition of four alanine residues at the N-terminus of a HΔ24 mutant restores viral titers to maximum values [16]. In another work, researchers used the HΔ24 protein variant to produce highly concentrated lentiviral stocks [15]. The results of our comparison of three variants of protein H showed that the size and rate of syncytium formation is maximum for the variant of protein HΔ18, significantly lower for variant 4A-HΔ24, and is minimal for HΔ24 (fig. 2); the transfection titer was also maximal for the HΔ18 variant; however, for the 4A-HΔ24 variant, the resulting transfection titer was only slightly inferior to the HΔ18 variant, and for the HΔ24 variant it was at least 2 orders of magnitude lower than the HΔ18 variant. In further experiments, lentiviral particles pseudotyped by HΔ18/ FΔ30 proteins were used. When measured on HEK-293 cells, the average viral titer of H/F pseudotyped lentiviral stocks was 15–20 times lower than for lentiviruses, pseudotyped with VSV G-protein (Table).

Optimization of NK-92 cell transduction conditions

The use of VSV-G-pseudotyped lentivirus vectors for transduction of NK-92 cells showed that addition of over ~ 105 i.u. per ml of medium for 8 hours leads to a significant drop in the viability of the culture. In addition, NK-92 cells were much less efficiently transduced by VSV-G-pseudotyped lentiviruses, the difference in transfection titer compared to HEK-293 was more than 3 orders of magnitude. To increase the efficiency of natural killer transduction, the use of the TBK1/IKKɛ inhibitor BX795 at a concentration of 6–8 μM has been described [20]. Evaluation of the effect of BX795 on the viability of NK-92 cells showed that they retain their viability at concentrations up to 3 μM (fig. 3). BX795 allowed to reduce the difference in the transduction efficiency of VSV-G-pseudotyped viral particles up to 300-fold. Under the same transduction conditions, H/F pseudotyped lentiviral vectors were able to transduce NK-92 cells with three times less efficacy than HEK-293 cells.

Evaluation of the cytotoxic effect of CAR-expressing NK-92 cells

Since NK-92 cells require to be cultivated in high densities in order to maintain proliferative activity, the tolerable cell:i.u. ratios did not allow to obtain sufficiently high percentage of transduced cells. Isolation of the tagRFP-expressing populations by FASC made it possible to obtain small fractions of CAR-expressing cells, however, the stress incurred by the sorting procedure led to significant loss of viability. To circumvent this problem, we performed sorting of CAR-expressing cells on magnetic particles coated with monoclonal antibodies to DYKDDDDK epitope. This approach turned out to be more gentle and did not lead to suppression of proliferation of NK-92 cells. CAR-expressing cells obtained with this method were tested for their ability to inhibit growth of CD20+ GFP-expressing Raji cells (Burkitt's lymphoma). Compared to unmodified cells, @CD20- NK-92 were able to suppress proliferation of Raji cells in lower dosages (fig. 4).

DISCUSSION

When comparing different variants of H glycoproteins, we found that shortening the cytoplasmic tail by more than 20 amino acids is impractical because of the strong decrease in transfection titers. H/F pseudotyped lentiviral particles showed significantly lower packing efficiency compared to lentiviral particles pseudotyped with VSV G-protein, but this factor was compensated by greater efficiency of transduction of NK- 92 cells. We noted that infection with H/F pseudotyped viral vectors leads to less significant suppression of proliferation of NK-92 cells, which allows to use of higher concentrations of viral particles for transduction, leading to an additional increase in efficiency. It is also noteworthy that with respect to NK-92 cells, BX795 was found to be active in lower concenrations than during transduction of primary cultures. In general, the use of a combination of H/F-pseudotyped lentiviral vectors, BX795 and subsequent sorting of transduced cells on magnetic microspheres allowed us to consistently obtain populations of CAR-expressing NK-92, that demonstrated high levels of cytotoxicity against antigen-expressing target cells.
NK-92 cells are distinguished by their sensitivity for cultivation conditions and, as the experiments have shown, they are more resistant to transduction with lentiviral vectors. However, these difficulties associated with the production of NK-92 CAR-expressing cells can later be compensated by the greater versatility of their applications for cellular immunotherapy, or as components of complex therapeutic approaches, for example, as carrier cells for the delivery of oncolytic viruses.

CONCLUSIONS

The results of the study showed that the optimal variant of the H protein of the measles virus for producing of H/F-pseudotyped lentivirus vectors is HΔ18 (in terms of transfection titer) and 4A-HΔ24 (in terms of the duration of production of viral particles), the largest transfection titers were achieved using a plasmid ratio of 8 : 8 : 7 : 1. The resulting preparations of H/F-pseudotyped lentiviral particles had 15–20 times lower transfection titer, compared with VSV-G-pseudotyped, while in the transduction of NK-92 cells the difference in titers was ~ 5 : 1 towards for H/F-pseudotyped virus vectors. The optimal concentration of the inhibitor TBK1/IKKɛ BX795 was 3 μM, the use of BX795 allowed to increase the transduction efficiency by ~ 3 times. Transduced CAR-NK-92 cells were successfully isolated by magnetic separation and were highly capable of inhibiting the proliferation of CD20-positive Raji cells.

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