Polydiacetylene vesicles of various compositions were assembled using a two-part mixture of 10,12-pentacosadiynoic acid (PCDA) and ethylenedioxy-bis-ethylamine (EDEA)-labeled PCDA in order to control surface charge and stability within a desired pH range. Investigation of the interaction of the vesicles with mammalian cells as a function of surface charge was carried out and identified a clear correlation in cell–vesicle association and corresponding cell death for vesicles with positive surface charge. The binding behavior of the vesicles was found to be tunable by regulating the proportion of anionic PCDA relative to cationic PCDA–EDEA content within vesicles as to control the surface charge as a function of pH. Association of vesicles with cells thus depended on the corresponding charge of the vesicles and cell surface. The prospect of this work may serve as a step toward future vesicle designs to allow triggered uptake of vesicles locally within low pH tumor microenvironments.
Immuno-Oncology (IO) therapies provide remarkable clinical benefits. However, too few patients respond, and there are no diagnostic tools that predict IO response with high accuracy. Moreover, as more IO drugs and combinations are approved, selecting the best IO-based regimen for each patient will become more complex. To facilitate this selection, we are developing an ex vivo live tumor fragment (LTF) screening platform that retains representation of a patient’s tumor microenvironment (TME) including immune cells, enabling development of deep neural networks to predict IO response and thereby individualize therapy. Here we present preliminary data from our proof-of-concept platform that performs tissue fragmentation/sorting, liquid handling, drug treatment, high-resolution dynamic imaging, and multiplex immuno-assays. Human tumor excisions were obtained from the Univ. of Wisconsin (IRB approved), and CT26 tumors were grown in mice subcutaneously. Live tumors were cut into 300 x 300 µm fragments of 100 - 300 µm thickness, sorted into multi-well plates, and cultured for 48 or 72 h in the presence or absence of anti-PD1 (nivolumab or mouse equivalent), anti-PD1 plus anti-CTLA4 (ipilimumab or mouse equivalent), or concanavalin A (ConA) as a positive control. Cell viability was measured by ATP luminescence assay or flow cytometry. Motility of CD8+ cells was tracked in human LTF using camelid VHH anti-hCD8a-AF594 and 3D multiphoton microscopy for 30 min. Supernatant cytokines were measured using bead immunoassay and T cell markers by flow cytometry. T cells were retained within LTFs, and the proportion of lymphocytes in LTFs was independent of fragment thickness (1.6%/2.1% for 300 µm, 1.4%/2.3% for 200 µm and 1.4%/2.8% for 100 µm thickness, for CD4+ and CD8+ T cells, respectively). Total cell viability and T cell viability exceeded 80% at 48h, and 3D LTF structure remained intact for at least 48 h. We treated LTFs with anti-PD1, anti-PD1 plus anti-CTLA4, or ConA and confirmed the presence of IFN-γ and 10 (mouse) or 16 (human) other cytokines associated with immune activation in both the ConA and anti-PD1 treated samples, but not the control. In human LTFs, cytokine panel upregulation was observed for anti-PD1 vs. control (p=1.1e-5) and anti-PD1 plus anti-CTLA4 vs. anti-PD1 (p=3.7e-9). Using multiphoton microscopy and CD8-binding nanobodies, we observed vigorous CD8+ T cell motility in human LTFs, with a speed of 10 µm/min, which is comparable to that reported in vivo. Our LTF platform has an immuno-competent TME in which we can detect cellular and secreted immune response markers, compare alternative treatments, and track the surveillance activity of infiltrating T cells. Future work will further advance the platform, enabling clinical trials for training and validating deep neural networks to predict response to checkpoint inhibitors and other IO drugs. Citation Format: Tomasz Zal, Leung Kau Tang, Laura Hrycyniak, Anura Shrestha, Dinesh Joshi, Pichet Adstamongkonkul, Kelsey Tweed, Wesley A. Cox-Muranami, Sean Caenepeel, Hinco J. Gierman, Kevin Eliceiri, Kristina A. Matkowskyj, Sam J. Lubner, John Rafter, Mike Szulczewski, Maneesh Arora, Jonathan Oliner. A live tumor fragment (LTF) platform with real-time imaging for immune response assays [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2022; 2022 Apr 8-13. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2022;82(12_Suppl):Abstract nr 2779.
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