Publication | Closed Access
DNA‐Edited Ligand Positioning on Red Blood Cells to Enable Optimized T Cell Activation for Adoptive Immunotherapy
81
Citations
41
References
2020
Year
Cell TherapyEngineeringPeptide EngineeringImmunologyImmunodominanceBiomedical EngineeringImmune Cell TherapyImmunotherapyAdoptive ImmunotherapySynthetic ImmunologyNanomedicineDna NanotechnologyCell TransplantationArtificial AntigenCell MembraneBioconjugationT Cell ImmunityCell EngineeringCell BiologyBiomolecular EngineeringImmunomodulationCellular Immune ResponseMedicineRed Blood Cells
Artificial antigen presenting cells (aAPCs) with surface-anchored T cell activating ligands hold great potential in adoptive immunotherapy. However, it remains challenging to precisely control the ligand positioning on those platforms using conventional bioconjugation chemistry. Utilizing DNA-assisted bottom-up self-assembly, we were able to precisely control both lateral and vertical distributions of T cell activation ligands on red blood cells (RBCs). The clustered lateral positioning of the peptide-major histocompatibility complex (pMHC) on RBCs with a short vertical distance to the cell membrane is favorable for more effective T cell activation, likely owing to their better mimicry of natural APCs. Such optimized RBC-based artificial APCs can stimulate T cell proliferation in vivo and effectively inhibit tumor growth with adoptive immunotherapy. DNA technology is thus a unique tool to precisely engineer the cell membrane interface and tune cell-cell interactions, which is promising for applications such as immunotherapy.
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