Nanoparticle backpacks developed by researchers boost the immune response against solid tumors.
Nanoparticle "backpacks" developed by MIT researchers hold immune-stimulating drugs, and attaching them directly to T cells could enhance those T cells' activity without harmful side effects in a study of mice. Programming the body's immune system to attack cancer cells has had promising results for treating blood cancers such as lymphoma and leukemia. In more than half of the treated animals, tumors disappeared completely.
‘The efficacy of the T cell therapy is improved with backpacked drugs that help the donor T cells survive and function more effectively.’
Even more importantly, we achieved that without any of the toxicity that you see with systemic injection of the drugs," says Darrell Irvine, a professor of biological engineering and of materials science and engineering, a member of MIT's Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research, and the senior author of the study. Irvine is one of the co-founders of a company called Torque Biotherapeutics that plans to begin clinical trials of this approach this summer. The lead authors of the paper, which appears in the July 9 issue of Nature Biotechnology, are former MIT postdoc Li Tang, who is now at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (EPFL), and former MIT grad student Yiran Zheng.
Harnessing the immune system
T cells are specialized immune cells that roam the body, identifying and killing infected cells. Cancer researchers have long been intrigued by the possibility of harnessing these immune cells to destroy tumors, through an approach called adoptive T cell therapy. To achieve this, researchers need to be able to create large populations of T cells that can recognize and attack a tumor.
"The general idea is to grow up large numbers of T cells that are tumor specific and then infuse them in patients," Irvine says.
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These methods have shown some success against lymphomas and leukemias, but it has proven difficult to generate a strong immune response against solid tumors. Researchers have tried to boost the response to solid tumors by injecting immune-stimulating drugs called cytokines along with the T cells. However, these drugs have harmful side effects, including inflammation, because they tend to stimulate any T cell they encounter. This limits the amount of drug that can be given.
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For the Nature Biotechnology study, the researchers created a new type of nanoparticle that can carry 100-fold more of the drug and does not release it until after the T cells encounter the tumor. These particles consist of a gel made from molecules of the cytokine IL-15 held together by a cross-linker that is designed to degrade only when the T cell carrying the particles reaches the tumor and becomes activated. This activation is signaled by a chemical change in the surface of the T cells.
"That allowed us to link T cell activation to the drug release rate," Irvine says. "The nanogels are preferentially dissolving when the T cells are in sites where they see tumor antigen: in the tumor and in the tumor-draining lymph nodes. The drug is most efficiently being released at the sites where you want it and not in some healthy tissue where it might cause trouble."
Enhanced response
The researchers tested this approach in mice whose T cells were genetically engineered to express a T cell receptor that targets a protein found in melanoma tumors. In about 60 percent of the mice, the therapy was so effective that the tumors disappeared completely after multiple treatments. The researchers also showed that attaching the nanoparticles to human T cells that were genetically modified to target glioblastoma cells enabled them to kill glioblastoma cells much more effectively.
The researchers also found that with the nanoparticles, they could give the mice eight times as much IL-15 without side effects, compared to injecting the drug throughout the body.
Torque Biotherapeutics, the company performing clinical trials for this treatment, plans to test it in many different types of tumors. Irvine says the hope is that this approach could work for any solid or blood tumor, as long as there is a known target that can be programmed into the T cells. He now plans to explore whether drugs other than IL-15 might be even more effective at stimulating T cells.
Source-Eurekalert