Genetic Engineering Publications - GEG Tech top picks
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Off-the-shelf, gene-edited CAR-T cells forge ahead, despite safety scare - Nature

Off-the-shelf, gene-edited CAR-T cells forge ahead, despite safety scare - Nature | Genetic Engineering Publications - GEG Tech top picks | Scoop.it
Race to the clinic reignites for an off-the-shelf alternative to autologous CAR-T cell therapy, even as concerns over chromosomal abnormalities linger.
BigField GEG Tech's insight:

The race to the clinic is reviving for a ready-made alternative to autologous CAR-T cell therapy, even as concerns about chromosomal abnormalities persist. The Advanced Regenerative Medicine Therapy designation, which makes the therapy eligible for accelerated approval, will also help remove a veil that has hung over standard CAR-T cell therapies since October, when the FDA put all trials of competitor Allogene Therapeutics on hold following the detection of a chromosomal abnormality in a patient who received ALLO-501A in a Phase 2 trial. The FDA's green light for CRISPR Therapeutics dispels broader concerns that the agency views this type of genotoxic safety event as an intractable problem for the entire class of allogeneic CAR-T therapies. Today, many companies are eliminating loci associated with the MHC-I to avoid host T cell recognition of transplanted CAR-T cells. Companies also equip their T cells with a variety of safety switches and performance enhancers.

However, as the complexity of the assembly increases, the risk of off-target effects also increases. This may be important from a safety perspective, given that most cancers lack unique antigens. Achieving rapid remission and re-dosing if necessary, can minimize the toxic effects that CAR-T cells can have on healthy tissues expressing the targeted antigen.

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Off-target effects of engineered nucleases 

Off-target effects of engineered nucleases  | Genetic Engineering Publications - GEG Tech top picks | Scoop.it
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Recent advances in gene editing with engineered nucleases have transformed our ability to manipulate the genome from diverse organisms for applications ranging from biomedical research to disease treatment. A major complication of use is the off-target of these engineered nucleases which is followed by DNA repair using normal cellular DNA repair mechanisms and which causes gene mutation or gross chromosome rearrangement. Here the authors reviewed developments will enable gene editing tools to be applied more broadly and safely in basic research and disease treatment.

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