Login / Signup

Biophysical Properties of Self-Assembled Immune Signals Impact Signal Processing and the Nature of Regulatory Immune Function.

Eugene FroimchukRobert S OakesSenta M KapnickAlexis A YanesChristopher M Jewell
Published in: Nano letters (2021)
Outcomes during immunotherapy are impacted not only by the specific therapeutic signals and pharmacodynamics, but also by the biophysical forms in which signals are delivered. This integration is determinative in autoimmunity because the disease is caused by immune dysregulation and inflammation. Unfortunately, the links between nanomaterial design, biophysical properties, and immune regulation are poorly defined. Here we designed cationic peptide antigens with defined charge distributions and then used electrostatics to assemble these peptides into complexes with anionic regulatory cues. We first show complexes induce antigen-specific tolerance during myelin-driven autoimmunity. We next show the affinity between these immune cues is controlled by charge balance and that affinity confers distinct biophysical properties important in immunological processing, including antigen availability. The underlying binding affinities between the self-assembled signals influences inflammatory gene expression in dendritic cells and antigen-specific regulatory outcomes in self-reactive transgenic T cells. This granular understanding of nanomaterial-immune interactions contributes to a more rational immunotherapy design.
Keyphrases
  • dendritic cells
  • gene expression
  • transcription factor
  • oxidative stress
  • skeletal muscle
  • weight loss
  • binding protein