Lung Tumor Microphysiological System with 3D Endothelium to Evaluate Modulators of T-Cell Infiltration

Author:

Wisdom Katrina M.ORCID,Suijker Johnny,van den Broek Lenie,Sridharan BanuPriyaORCID,Grandhi Taraka Sai PavanORCID,Cheng Aaron,Lamb MahdiORCID,Titus Steven A.,Gehman Andrew,Poore Derek,Shah Niyant,Cheng Shih-HsunORCID,Kim Edward,Griffin SueORCID,Ekert JasonORCID

Abstract

AbstractLung cancer is a leading cause of death worldwide, with only a fraction of patients responding to immunotherapy. The correlation between increased T-cell infiltration and positive patient outcomes has motivated the search for therapeutics promoting T-cell infiltration. While transwell and spheroid platforms have been employed, these models lack flow and endothelial barriers, and cannot faithfully model T-cell adhesion, extravasation and migration through 3D tissue. Presented here is a 3D chemotaxis assay, in a lung tumor on chip model with 3D endothelium (LToC-Endo), to address this need. The described assay consists of a vascular tubule cultured under rocking flow, through which T-cells are added; a collagenous stromal barrier, through which T-cells infiltrate; and a chemoattractant/tumor compartment. Here, activated T-cells extravasate and infiltrate in response to gradients of rhCXCL11 and rhCXCL12. Adopting a T-cell activation protocol with a rest period enables proliferative burst prior to introducing T-cells into chips, increases T-cell expression of CXCR3 and CXCR4 receptors, and enhances assay sensitivity. In addition, incorporating this rest recovers endothelial activation in response to rhCXCL12. As a final control, we show that blocking ICAM-1 interferes with T-cell adhesion and chemotaxis. This microphysiological system, which mimics in vivo stromal and vascular barriers, can be used to evaluate potentiation of immune chemotaxis into tumors while probing for vascular responses to potential therapeutics. Finally, we propose a translational strategy by which this assay could be linked to preclinical and clinical models to support human dose prediction, personalized medicine, and the reduction, refinement, and replacement of animal models.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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