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Microbial Systems Enhancing CAR-Based Therapies: A Synthetic Biology Paradigm for Next-Generation Cancer Immunotherapy.

Current microbiology 2025 Vol.83(2) p. 106

Sanjay G, Seetharam RN, Singdevsachan SK, Sathya M

📝 환자 설명용 한 줄

Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-based immunotherapies face significant translational challenges in solid tumor applications, particularly regarding manufacturing scalability, tumor targeting specifici

🔬 핵심 임상 통계 (초록에서 자동 추출 — 원문 검증 권장)
  • 연구 설계 systematic review

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BibTeX ↓ RIS ↓
APA Sanjay G, Seetharam RN, et al. (2025). Microbial Systems Enhancing CAR-Based Therapies: A Synthetic Biology Paradigm for Next-Generation Cancer Immunotherapy.. Current microbiology, 83(2), 106. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00284-025-04679-z
MLA Sanjay G, et al.. "Microbial Systems Enhancing CAR-Based Therapies: A Synthetic Biology Paradigm for Next-Generation Cancer Immunotherapy.." Current microbiology, vol. 83, no. 2, 2025, pp. 106.
PMID 41454921

Abstract

Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-based immunotherapies face significant translational challenges in solid tumor applications, particularly regarding manufacturing scalability, tumor targeting specificity, and antigen heterogeneity. This systematic review evaluates microbial systems as innovative platforms to address these limitations through synthetic biology-driven approaches, with a focus on bridging preclinical advances to clinical implementation. Analysis of 389 peer-reviewed studies (2015-2025) reveals that engineered probiotic strains (e.g., Escherichia coli Nissle 1917) achieve selective tumor colonization while functioning as programmable factories for:1. Synthetic antigen production and single-chain variable fragment (scFv) expression,2. Costimulatory domain delivery enabling antigen-agnostic CAR-T activation,3. Tumor microenvironment modulation via immunostimulatory chemokines. Microbial platforms demonstrate superior manufacturing economics (70-90% cost reduction vs. conventional methods) and enhance CAR-T functionality through epigenetic reprogramming by microbial metabolites (e.g., short-chain fatty acids). CRISPR/Cas-engineered genetic circuits further enable precise spatiotemporal control of therapeutic payloads.Microbial systems represent transformative platforms for scalable, programmable CAR immunotherapy with significant potential for solid tumor targeting. Key barriers to clinical translation include biocontainment challenges, incomplete mechanistic understanding of tumor homing specificity, and safety validation requirements. Strategic integration of synthetic biology with microbial chassis offers a viable pathway toward accessible next-generation cancer therapies.

MeSH Terms

Animals; Humans; Immunotherapy; Immunotherapy, Adoptive; Neoplasms; Receptors, Chimeric Antigen; Synthetic Biology