In Vivo Stimulation of Therapeutic Antigen‐Specific T Cells in an Artificial Lymph Node Matrix

Author:

Livingston Natalie K.12345ORCID,Hickey John W.12345,Sim Hajin3,Salathe Sebastian F.6,Choy Joseph457,Kong Jiayuan457,Silver Aliyah B.489,Stelzel Jessica L.145,Omotoso Mary O.13,Li Shuyi3,Chaisawangwong Worarat10,Roy Sayantika1,Ariail Emily C.1,Lanis Mara R.1,Pradeep Pratibha1,Bieler Joan Glick3,Witte Savannah Est1,Leonard Elissa11,Doloff Joshua C.145712,Spangler Jamie B.12458,Mao Hai‐Quan14578,Schneck Jonathan P.123812ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biomedical Engineering School of Medicine Johns Hopkins University Baltimore MD 21205 USA

2. Institute for Cell Engineering School of Medicine Johns Hopkins University Baltimore MD 21205 USA

3. Department of Pathology School of Medicine Johns Hopkins University Baltimore MD 21205 USA

4. Translational Tissue Engineering Center Johns Hopkins University Baltimore MD 21231 USA

5. Institute for NanoBioTechnology Johns Hopkins University Baltimore MD 21218 USA

6. Department of Biology Krieger School of Arts and Sciences Johns Hopkins University Baltimore MD 21218 USA

7. Department of Materials Science and Engineering Whiting School of Engineering Johns Hopkins University Baltimore MD 21218 USA

8. Johns Hopkins Center for Translational ImmunoEngineering Johns Hopkins University Baltimore MD 21205 USA

9. Department of Molecular Microbiology and Immunology Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health Johns Hopkins University Baltimore MD 21205 USA

10. Graduate Program in Immunology School of Medicine Johns Hopkins University Baltimore MD 21205 USA

11. Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering Whiting School of Engineering Johns Hopkins University Baltimore MD 21218 USA

12. Department of Oncology School of Medicine Johns Hopkins University Baltimore MD 21205 USA

Abstract

AbstractT cells are critical mediators of antigen‐specific immune responses and are common targets for immunotherapy. Biomaterial scaffolds have previously been used to stimulate antigen‐presenting cells to elicit antigen‐specific immune responses; however, structural and molecular features that directly stimulate and expand naïve, endogenous, tumor‐specific T cells in vivo have not been defined. Here, an artificial lymph node (aLN) matrix is created, which consists of an extracellular matrix hydrogel conjugated with peptide‐loaded‐MHC complex (Signal 1), the co‐stimulatory signal anti‐CD28 (Signal 2), and a tethered IL‐2 (Signal 3), that can bypass challenges faced by other approaches to activate T cells in situ such as vaccines. This dynamic immune‐stimulating platform enables direct, in vivo antigen‐specific CD8+ T cell stimulation, as well as recruitment and coordination of host immune cells, providing an immuno‐stimulatory microenvironment for antigen‐specific T cell activation and expansion. Co‐injecting the aLN with naïve, wild‐type CD8+ T cells results in robust activation and expansion of tumor‐targeted T cells that kill target cells and slow tumor growth in several distal tumor models. The aLN platform induces potent in vivo antigen‐specific CD8+ T cell stimulation without the need for ex vivo priming or expansion and enables in situ manipulation of antigen‐specific responses for immunotherapies.

Funder

National Science Foundation

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Wiley

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