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416


LDL-Binding IL-10 Reduces Vascular Inflammation in Atherosclerotic Mice

Volpatti, Lisa R; de Matos, Salvador Norton; Borjas, Gustavo; Reda, Joseph; Watkins, Elyse A; Zhou, Zhengjie; Nguyen, Mindy; Solanki, Ani; Fang, Yun; Hubbell, Jeffrey A
Atherosclerosis is a chronic inflammatory disease associated with the accumulation of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) in arterial walls. Higher levels of the anti-inflammatory cytokine IL-10 in serum are correlated with reduced plaque burden. However, cytokine therapies have not translated well to the clinic, partially due to their rapid clearance and pleiotropic nature. Here, we engineered IL-10 to overcome these challenges by hitchhiking on LDL to atherosclerotic plaques. Specifically, we constructed fusion proteins in which one domain is IL-10 and the other is an antibody fragment (Fab) that binds to protein epitopes of LDL. In murine models of atherosclerosis, we show that systemically administered Fab-IL-10 constructs bind circulating LDL and traffic to atherosclerotic plaques. One such construct, 2D03-IL-10, significantly reduces aortic immune cell infiltration to levels comparable to healthy mice, whereas non-targeted IL-10 has no therapeutic effect. Mechanistically, we demonstrate that 2D03-IL-10 preferentially associates with foamy macrophages and reduces pro-inflammatory activation markers. This platform technology can be applied to a variety of therapeutics and shows promise as a potential targeted anti-inflammatory therapy in atherosclerosis.
PMCID:10942346
PMID: 38496521
ISSN: 2692-8205
CID: 5795312

Therapeutic synthetic and natural materials for immunoengineering

Slezak, Anna; Chang, Kevin; Hossainy, Samir; Mansurov, Aslan; Rowan, Stuart J; Hubbell, Jeffrey A; Guler, Mustafa O
Immunoengineering is a rapidly evolving field that has been driving innovations in manipulating immune system for new treatment tools and methods. The need for materials for immunoengineering applications has gained significant attention in recent years due to the growing demand for effective therapies that can target and regulate the immune system. Biologics and biomaterials are emerging as promising tools for controlling immune responses, and a wide variety of materials, including proteins, polymers, nanoparticles, and hydrogels, are being developed for this purpose. In this review article, we explore the different types of materials used in immunoengineering applications, their properties and design principles, and highlight the latest therapeutic materials advancements. Recent works in adjuvants, vaccines, immune tolerance, immunotherapy, and tissue models for immunoengineering studies are discussed.
PMCID:11557218
PMID: 38170619
ISSN: 1460-4744
CID: 5795332

Glycosylation-modified antigens as a tolerance-inducing vaccine platform prevent anaphylaxis in a pre-clinical model of food allergy

Cao, Shijie; Maulloo, Chitavi D; Raczy, Michal M; Sabados, Matthew; Slezak, Anna J; Nguyen, Mindy; Solanki, Ani; Wallace, Rachel P; Shim, Ha-Na; Wilson, D Scott; Hubbell, Jeffrey A
The only FDA-approved oral immunotherapy for a food allergy provides protection against accidental exposure to peanuts. However, this therapy often causes discomfort or side effects and requires long-term commitment. Better preventive and therapeutic solutions are urgently needed. We develop a tolerance-inducing vaccine technology that utilizes glycosylation-modified antigens to induce antigen-specific non-responsiveness. The glycosylation-modified antigens are administered intravenously (i.v.) or subcutaneously (s.c.) and traffic to the liver or lymph nodes, respectively, leading to preferential internalization by antigen-presenting cells, educating the immune system to respond in an innocuous way. In a mouse model of cow's milk allergy, treatment with glycosylation-modified β-lactoglobulin (BLG) is effective in preventing the onset of allergy. In addition, s.c. administration of glycosylation-modified BLG shows superior safety and potential in treating existing allergies in combination with anti-CD20 co-therapy. This platform provides an antigen-specific immunomodulatory strategy to prevent and treat food allergies.
PMCID:10829738
PMID: 38128531
ISSN: 2666-3791
CID: 5795352

Immunoengineering a Future of Molecular, Material, and Cellular Therapeutics [Editorial]

Hubbell, Jeffrey A
PMID: 38166250
ISSN: 1550-6606
CID: 5795342

Targeted Polymersome Delivery of a Stapled Peptide for Drugging the Tumor Protein p53:BCL-2-Family Axis in Diffuse Large B-Cell Lymphoma

Schnorenberg, Mathew R; Hawley, Katrina M; Thomas-Toth, Anika T; Watkins, Elyse A; Tian, Yu; Ting, Jeffrey M; Leak, Logan B; Kucera, Isadora M; Raczy, Michal M; Kung, Andrew L; Hubbell, Jeffrey A; Tirrell, Matthew V; LaBelle, James L
Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) remains a formidable diagnosis in need of new treatment paradigms. In this work, we elucidated an opportunity for therapeutic synergy in DLBCL by reactivating tumor protein p53 with a stapled peptide, ATSP-7041, thereby priming cells for apoptosis and enhancing their sensitivity to BCL-2 family modulation with a BH3-mimetic, ABT-263 (navitoclax). While this combination was highly effective at activating apoptosis in DLBCL in vitro, it was highly toxic in vivo, resulting in a prohibitively narrow therapeutic window. We, therefore, developed a targeted nanomedicine delivery platform to maintain the therapeutic potency of this combination while minimizing its toxicity via packaging and targeted delivery of a stapled peptide. We developed a CD19-targeted polymersome using block copolymers of poly(ethylene glycol) disulfide linked to poly(propylene sulfide) (PEG-SS-PPS) for ATSP-7041 delivery into DLBCL cells. Intracellular delivery was optimized in vitro and validated in vivo by using an aggressive human DLBCL xenograft model. Targeted delivery of ATSP-7041 unlocked the ability to systemically cotreat with ABT-263, resulting in delayed tumor growth, prolonged survival, and no overt toxicity. This work demonstrates a proof-of-concept for antigen-specific targeting of polymersome nanomedicines, targeted delivery of a stapled peptide in vivo, and synergistic dual intrinsic apoptotic therapy against DLBCL via direct p53 reactivation and BCL-2 family modulation.
PMCID:10722602
PMID: 37688780
ISSN: 1936-086x
CID: 5795392

Engineered IL-7 synergizes with IL-12 immunotherapy to prevent T cell exhaustion and promote memory without exacerbating toxicity

Kang, Seounghun; Mansurov, Aslan; Kurtanich, Trevin; Chun, Hye Rin; Slezak, Anna J; Volpatti, Lisa R; Chang, Kevin; Wang, Thomas; Alpar, Aaron T; Refvik, Kirsten C; Hansen, O Isabella; Borjas, Gustavo J; Shim, Ha-Na; Hultgren, Kevin T; Gomes, Suzana; Solanki, Ani; Ishihara, Jun; Swartz, Melody A; Hubbell, Jeffrey A
Cancer immunotherapy is moving toward combination regimens with agents of complementary mechanisms of action to achieve more frequent and robust efficacy. However, compared with single-agent therapies, combination immunotherapies are associated with increased overall toxicity because the very same mechanisms also work in concert to enhance systemic inflammation and promote off-tumor toxicity. Therefore, rational design of combination regimens that achieve improved antitumor control without exacerbated toxicity is a main objective in combination immunotherapy. Here, we show that the combination of engineered, tumor matrix-binding interleukin-7 (IL-7) and IL-12 achieves remarkable anticancer effects by activating complementary pathways without inducing any additive immunotoxicity. Mechanistically, engineered IL-12 provided effector properties to T cells, while IL-7 prevented their exhaustion and boosted memory formation as assessed by tumor rechallenge experiments. The dual combination also rendered checkpoint inhibitor (CPI)-resistant genetically engineered melanoma model responsive to CPI. Thus, our approach provides a framework of evaluation of rationally designed combinations in immuno-oncology and yields a promising therapy.
PMCID:10686557
PMID: 38019919
ISSN: 2375-2548
CID: 5795452

Author Correction: Topically-applied collagen-binding serum albumin-fused interleukin-4 modulates wound microenvironment in non-healing wounds

Lauterbach, Abigail L; Wallace, Rachel P; Alpar, Aaron T; Refvik, Kirsten C; Reda, Joseph W; Ishihara, Ako; Beckman, Taryn N; Slezak, Anna J; Mizukami, Yukari; Mansurov, Aslan; Gomes, Suzana; Ishihara, Jun; Hubbell, Jeffrey A
PMID: 37919358
ISSN: 2057-3995
CID: 5795422

Mannose-Decorated Co-Polymer Facilitates Controlled Release of Butyrate to Accelerate Chronic Wound Healing

Lauterbach, Abigail L; Slezak, Anna J; Wang, Ruyi; Cao, Shijie; Raczy, Michal M; Watkins, Elyse A; Jimenez, Carlos J Medina; Hubbell, Jeffrey A
Butyrate is a key bacterial metabolite that plays an important and complex role in modulation of immunity and maintenance of epithelial barriers. Its translation to clinic is limited by poor bioavailability, pungent smell, and the need for high doses, and effective delivery strategies have yet to realize clinical potential. Here, a novel polymeric delivery platform for tunable and sustainable release of butyrate consisting of a methacrylamide backbone with butyryl ester or phenyl ester side chains as well as mannosyl side chains, which is also applicable to other therapeutically relevant metabolites is reported. This platform's utility in the treatment of non-healing diabetic wounds is explored. This butyrate-containing material modulated immune cell activation in vitro and induced striking changes in the milieu of soluble cytokine and chemokine signals present within the diabetic wound microenvironment in vivo. This novel therapy shows efficacy in the treatment of non-healing wounds through the modulation of the soluble signals present within the wound, and importantly accommodates the critical temporal regulation associated with the wound healing process. Currently, the few therapies to address non-healing wounds demonstrate limited efficacy. This novel platform is positioned to address this large unmet clinical need and improve the closure of otherwise non-healing wounds.
PMCID:11468131
PMID: 37503634
ISSN: 2192-2659
CID: 5795442

Synthetically mannosylated antigens induce antigen-specific humoral tolerance and reduce anti-drug antibody responses to immunogenic biologics

Wallace, Rachel P; Refvik, Kirsten C; Antane, Jennifer T; Brünggel, Kym; Tremain, Andrew C; Raczy, Michal R; Alpar, Aaron T; Nguyen, Mindy; Solanki, Ani; Slezak, Anna J; Watkins, Elyse A; Lauterbach, Abigail L; Cao, Shijie; Wilson, D Scott; Hubbell, Jeffrey A
Immunogenic biologics trigger an anti-drug antibody (ADA) response in patients, which reduces efficacy and increases adverse reactions. Our laboratory has previously shown that targeting protein antigen to the liver microenvironment can reduce antigen-specific T cell responses; herein, we present a strategy to increase delivery of otherwise immunogenic biologics to the liver via conjugation to a synthetic mannose polymer (p(Man)). This delivery leads to reduced antigen-specific T follicular helper cell and B cell responses resulting in diminished ADA production, which is maintained throughout subsequent administrations of the native biologic. We found that p(Man)-antigen treatment impairs the ADA response against recombinant uricase, a highly immunogenic biologic, without a dependence on hapten immunodominance or control by Tregs. We identify increased TCR signaling and increased apoptosis and exhaustion in T cells as effects of p(Man)-antigen treatment via transcriptomic analyses. This modular platform may enhance tolerance to biologics, enabling long-term solutions for an ever-increasing healthcare problem.
PMID: 37066302
ISSN: 2692-8205
CID: 5795302

Topically-applied collagen-binding serum albumin-fused interleukin-4 modulates wound microenvironment in non-healing wounds

Lauterbach, Abigail L; Wallace, Rachel P; Alpar, Aaron T; Refvik, Kirsten C; Reda, Joseph W; Ishihara, Ako; Beckman, Taryn N; Slezak, Anna J; Mizukami, Yukari; Mansurov, Aslan; Gomes, Suzana; Ishihara, Jun; Hubbell, Jeffrey A
Non-healing wounds have a negative impact on quality of life and account for many cases of amputation and even early death among patients. Diabetic patients are the predominate population affected by these non-healing wounds. Despite the significant clinical demand, treatment with biologics has not broadly impacted clinical care. Interleukin-4 (IL-4) is a potent modulator of the immune system, capable of skewing macrophages towards a pro-regeneration phenotype (M2) and promoting angiogenesis, but can be toxic after frequent administration and is limited by its short half-life and low bioavailability. Here, we demonstrate the design and characterization of an engineered recombinant interleukin-4 construct. We utilize this collagen-binding, serum albumin-fused IL-4 variant (CBD-SA-IL-4) delivered in a hyaluronic acid (HA)-based gel for localized application of IL-4 to dermal wounds in a type 2 diabetic mouse model known for poor healing as proof-of-concept for improved tissue repair. Our studies indicate that CBD-SA-IL-4 is retained within the wound and can modulate the wound microenvironment through induction of M2 macrophages and angiogenesis. CBD-SA-IL-4 treatment significantly accelerated wound healing compared to native IL-4 and HA vehicle treatment without inducing systemic side effects. This CBD-SA-IL-4 construct can address the underlying immune dysfunction present in the non-healing wound, leading to more effective tissue healing in the clinic.
PMID: 37696884
ISSN: 2057-3995
CID: 5795432