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Cell engineering with microfluidic squeezing preserves functionality of primary immune cells in vivo

The translational potential of cell-based therapies is often limited by complications related to effectively engineering and manufacturing functional cells. While the use of electroporation is widespread, the impact of electroporation on cell state and function has yet to be fully characterized. Her...

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Autores principales: DiTommaso, Tia, Cole, Julie M., Cassereau, Luke, Buggé, Joshua A., Hanson, Jacquelyn L. Sikora, Bridgen, Devin T., Stokes, Brittany D., Loughhead, Scott M., Beutel, Bruce A., Gilbert, Jonathan B., Nussbaum, Kathrin, Sorrentino, Antonio, Toggweiler, Janine, Schmidt, Tobias, Gyuelveszi, Gabor, Bernstein, Howard, Sharei, Armon
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: National Academy of Sciences 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6243275/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30381459
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1809671115
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author DiTommaso, Tia
Cole, Julie M.
Cassereau, Luke
Buggé, Joshua A.
Hanson, Jacquelyn L. Sikora
Bridgen, Devin T.
Stokes, Brittany D.
Loughhead, Scott M.
Beutel, Bruce A.
Gilbert, Jonathan B.
Nussbaum, Kathrin
Sorrentino, Antonio
Toggweiler, Janine
Schmidt, Tobias
Gyuelveszi, Gabor
Bernstein, Howard
Sharei, Armon
author_facet DiTommaso, Tia
Cole, Julie M.
Cassereau, Luke
Buggé, Joshua A.
Hanson, Jacquelyn L. Sikora
Bridgen, Devin T.
Stokes, Brittany D.
Loughhead, Scott M.
Beutel, Bruce A.
Gilbert, Jonathan B.
Nussbaum, Kathrin
Sorrentino, Antonio
Toggweiler, Janine
Schmidt, Tobias
Gyuelveszi, Gabor
Bernstein, Howard
Sharei, Armon
author_sort DiTommaso, Tia
collection PubMed
description The translational potential of cell-based therapies is often limited by complications related to effectively engineering and manufacturing functional cells. While the use of electroporation is widespread, the impact of electroporation on cell state and function has yet to be fully characterized. Here, we use a genome-wide approach to study optimized electroporation treatment and identify striking disruptions in the expression profiles of key functional transcripts of human T cells. These genetic disruptions result in concomitant perturbation of cytokine secretion including a 648-fold increase in IL-2 secretion (P < 0.01) and a 30-fold increase in IFN-γ secretion (P < 0.05). Ultimately, the effects at the transcript and protein level resulted in functional deficiencies in vivo, with electroporated T cells failing to demonstrate sustained antigen-specific effector responses when subjected to immunological challenge. In contrast, cells subjected to a mechanical membrane disruption-based delivery mechanism, cell squeezing, had minimal aberrant transcriptional responses [0% of filtered genes misregulated, false discovery rate (FDR) q < 0.1] relative to electroporation (17% of genes misregulated, FDR q < 0.1) and showed undiminished effector responses, homing capabilities, and therapeutic potential in vivo. In a direct comparison of functionality, T cells edited for PD-1 via electroporation failed to distinguish from untreated controls in a therapeutic tumor model, while T cells edited with similar efficiency via cell squeezing demonstrated the expected tumor-killing advantage. This work demonstrates that the delivery mechanism used to insert biomolecules affects functionality and warrants further study.
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spelling pubmed-62432752018-11-27 Cell engineering with microfluidic squeezing preserves functionality of primary immune cells in vivo DiTommaso, Tia Cole, Julie M. Cassereau, Luke Buggé, Joshua A. Hanson, Jacquelyn L. Sikora Bridgen, Devin T. Stokes, Brittany D. Loughhead, Scott M. Beutel, Bruce A. Gilbert, Jonathan B. Nussbaum, Kathrin Sorrentino, Antonio Toggweiler, Janine Schmidt, Tobias Gyuelveszi, Gabor Bernstein, Howard Sharei, Armon Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A PNAS Plus The translational potential of cell-based therapies is often limited by complications related to effectively engineering and manufacturing functional cells. While the use of electroporation is widespread, the impact of electroporation on cell state and function has yet to be fully characterized. Here, we use a genome-wide approach to study optimized electroporation treatment and identify striking disruptions in the expression profiles of key functional transcripts of human T cells. These genetic disruptions result in concomitant perturbation of cytokine secretion including a 648-fold increase in IL-2 secretion (P < 0.01) and a 30-fold increase in IFN-γ secretion (P < 0.05). Ultimately, the effects at the transcript and protein level resulted in functional deficiencies in vivo, with electroporated T cells failing to demonstrate sustained antigen-specific effector responses when subjected to immunological challenge. In contrast, cells subjected to a mechanical membrane disruption-based delivery mechanism, cell squeezing, had minimal aberrant transcriptional responses [0% of filtered genes misregulated, false discovery rate (FDR) q < 0.1] relative to electroporation (17% of genes misregulated, FDR q < 0.1) and showed undiminished effector responses, homing capabilities, and therapeutic potential in vivo. In a direct comparison of functionality, T cells edited for PD-1 via electroporation failed to distinguish from untreated controls in a therapeutic tumor model, while T cells edited with similar efficiency via cell squeezing demonstrated the expected tumor-killing advantage. This work demonstrates that the delivery mechanism used to insert biomolecules affects functionality and warrants further study. National Academy of Sciences 2018-11-13 2018-10-31 /pmc/articles/PMC6243275/ /pubmed/30381459 http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1809671115 Text en Copyright © 2018 the Author(s). Published by PNAS. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This open access article is distributed under Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0 (CC BY) (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle PNAS Plus
DiTommaso, Tia
Cole, Julie M.
Cassereau, Luke
Buggé, Joshua A.
Hanson, Jacquelyn L. Sikora
Bridgen, Devin T.
Stokes, Brittany D.
Loughhead, Scott M.
Beutel, Bruce A.
Gilbert, Jonathan B.
Nussbaum, Kathrin
Sorrentino, Antonio
Toggweiler, Janine
Schmidt, Tobias
Gyuelveszi, Gabor
Bernstein, Howard
Sharei, Armon
Cell engineering with microfluidic squeezing preserves functionality of primary immune cells in vivo
title Cell engineering with microfluidic squeezing preserves functionality of primary immune cells in vivo
title_full Cell engineering with microfluidic squeezing preserves functionality of primary immune cells in vivo
title_fullStr Cell engineering with microfluidic squeezing preserves functionality of primary immune cells in vivo
title_full_unstemmed Cell engineering with microfluidic squeezing preserves functionality of primary immune cells in vivo
title_short Cell engineering with microfluidic squeezing preserves functionality of primary immune cells in vivo
title_sort cell engineering with microfluidic squeezing preserves functionality of primary immune cells in vivo
topic PNAS Plus
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6243275/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30381459
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1809671115
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