Adoptive cell therapy(ACT)is an immunotherapy strategy for cancer that has seen widespread clinical success.During ACT,patient-derived lymphocytes are stimulated with the antigen of interest ex vivo,proliferated,then ...Adoptive cell therapy(ACT)is an immunotherapy strategy for cancer that has seen widespread clinical success.During ACT,patient-derived lymphocytes are stimulated with the antigen of interest ex vivo,proliferated,then returned to the patient to initiate an antigen-specific antitumor response.While effective,this process is resource-intensive and logistically impossible for many patients.Particulate artificial antigen presenting cells(aAPCs)offer a potential“off-the-shelf”alternative to ex vivo ACT.While particulate aAPCs perform well in vitro,they have had limited success in vivo due to poor bioavailability after injection.Barriers to bioavailability include rapid clearance,unfavorable biodistribution,and inadequate interactions with CD8+T cells at sites of interest.Biomaterial properties such as elasticity have been shown to vastly impact the bioavailability and particle-cell interactions,but this has yet to be investigated in the context of aAPCs for in vivo T-cell stimulation.Previous literature likewise indicates that biomaterial properties,especially elasticity,can modulate T-cell activation in vitro.With the goal of creating a more biomimetic,next-generation particulate aAPC,we developed a poly(ethylene)glycol hydrogel particle platform with tunable elasticity to investigate the impact of elasticity on antigen-specific T cell activation for in vivo adoptive transfer.Using this knowledge,we were able to gain more precise control over in vivo T cell activation and investigate possible mechanisms including the effects of aAPC elasticity on T cell binding,macrophage uptake,and the protein corona.展开更多
基金the NIH for support of this research(P41EB028239)the National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship(Nos.DGE-1746891(SEW)and DGE-1746891(SRS)).
文摘Adoptive cell therapy(ACT)is an immunotherapy strategy for cancer that has seen widespread clinical success.During ACT,patient-derived lymphocytes are stimulated with the antigen of interest ex vivo,proliferated,then returned to the patient to initiate an antigen-specific antitumor response.While effective,this process is resource-intensive and logistically impossible for many patients.Particulate artificial antigen presenting cells(aAPCs)offer a potential“off-the-shelf”alternative to ex vivo ACT.While particulate aAPCs perform well in vitro,they have had limited success in vivo due to poor bioavailability after injection.Barriers to bioavailability include rapid clearance,unfavorable biodistribution,and inadequate interactions with CD8+T cells at sites of interest.Biomaterial properties such as elasticity have been shown to vastly impact the bioavailability and particle-cell interactions,but this has yet to be investigated in the context of aAPCs for in vivo T-cell stimulation.Previous literature likewise indicates that biomaterial properties,especially elasticity,can modulate T-cell activation in vitro.With the goal of creating a more biomimetic,next-generation particulate aAPC,we developed a poly(ethylene)glycol hydrogel particle platform with tunable elasticity to investigate the impact of elasticity on antigen-specific T cell activation for in vivo adoptive transfer.Using this knowledge,we were able to gain more precise control over in vivo T cell activation and investigate possible mechanisms including the effects of aAPC elasticity on T cell binding,macrophage uptake,and the protein corona.