Fetal bovine serum (FBS) or human serum is widely used in the production of chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T‑cells. In order to overcome a lot‑to‑lot inconsis‑ tency, the use of chemically defined medium that is free of animal‑components would be highly desirable. The present study compared three serum‑free media [Prime‑XV™ T Cell CDM, Fujifilm™ (FF), LymphoONE™ T‑Cell Expansion Xeno‑Free Medium, Takara Bio™ (TB) and TCM GMP‑Prototype, CellGenix™ (CG)] to the standard CAR T‑cell medium containing FBS (RCF). After 12 days of CD19.CAR T‑cell culture, the expansion, viability, trans‑ duction efficiency and phenotype were assessed using flow cytometry. The functionality of CAR T‑cells was evaluated using intracellular staining, a chromium release assay and a long‑term co‑culture assay. Expansion and viability did not differ between the CAR T‑cells generated in serum‑free media compared to the standard FBS‑containing medium. The CG CAR T‑cells had a statistically significant higher frequency of IFNγ+ and IFNγ+TNF‑α+ CAR T‑cells than the CAR T‑cells cultured with FBS (22.5 vs. 7.6%, P=0.0194; 15.3 vs. 6.2%, P=0.0399, respectively) as detected by intracellular cytokine staining. The CAR T‑cells generated with serum‑free media exhibited a higher cytotoxicity than the CAR T‑cells cultured with FBS in the evaluation by chromium release assay [CG vs. RCF (P=0.0182), FF vs. RCF (P=0.0482) and TB vs. RCF (P=0.0482)]. Phenotyping on day 12 of CAR T‑cell produc‑ tion did not reveal a significant difference in the expression of the exhaustion markers, programmed cell death protein 1, lymphocyte‑activation gene 3 and T‑cell immunoglobulin and mucin‑domain containing‑3. The CAR T‑cells cultured in FF had a higher percentage of central memory CAR T‑cells (40.0 vs. 14.3%, P=0.0470) than the CAR T‑cells cultured with FBS, whereas the CAR T‑cells in FF (6.2 vs. 24.2%, P=0.0029) and CG (11.0% vs. 24.2%, P=0.0468) had a lower frequency of naïve CAR T‑cells. On the whole, the present study demon‑ strates that in general, the functionality and expansion of CAR T cells are maintained in serum‑free media. Given the advan‑ tages of freedom from bovine material and consistent quality, serum‑free media hold promise for the future development of the field of GMP manufacturing of CAR T‑cells.
CITATION STYLE
Eberhardt, F., Hückelhoven-Krauss, A., Kunz, A., Jiang, G., Sauer, T., Reichman, A., … Keib, A. (2023). Impact of serum‑free media on the expansion and functionality of CD19.CAR T‑cells. International Journal of Molecular Medicine, 52(1). https://doi.org/10.3892/ijmm.2023.5261
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