Lyophilized lymph nodes for improved delivery of chimeric antigen receptor T cells.
Jiaqi ShiWei WuDong ChenZiyan LiaoTao ShengYanfang WangYuejun YaoQing WuFeng LiuRuyi ZhouChaojie ZhuXinyuan ShenZheng-Wei MaoYuan DingWeilin WangGianpietro DottiJie SunXiao LiangWei-Jia FangPeng ZhaoHong-Jun LiZhen GuPublished in: Nature materials (2024)
Lymph nodes are crucial organs of the adaptive immune system, orchestrating T cell priming, activation and tolerance. T cell activity and function are highly regulated by lymph nodes, which have a unique structure harbouring distinct cells that work together to detect and respond to pathogen-derived antigens. Here we show that implanted patient-derived freeze-dried lymph nodes loaded with chimeric antigen receptor T cells improve delivery to solid tumours and inhibit tumour recurrence after surgery. Chimeric antigen receptor T cells can be effectively loaded into lyophilized lymph nodes, whose unaltered meshwork and cytokine and chemokine contents promote chimeric antigen receptor T cell viability and activation. In mouse models of cell-line-derived human cervical cancer and patient-derived pancreatic cancer, delivery of chimeric antigen receptor T cells targeting mesothelin via the freeze-dried lymph nodes is more effective in preventing tumour recurrence when compared to hydrogels containing T-cell-supporting cytokines. This tissue-mediated cell delivery strategy holds promise for controlled release of various cells and therapeutics with long-term activity and augmented function.
Keyphrases
- dendritic cells
- lymph node
- neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- sentinel lymph node
- induced apoptosis
- drug delivery
- cell cycle arrest
- cancer therapy
- single cell
- cell death
- wound healing
- cell therapy
- cell proliferation
- oxidative stress
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- signaling pathway
- bone marrow
- free survival
- early stage
- extracellular matrix
- tissue engineering