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3352 Surgical Adjuvant of Immunomodulatory Gene Circuits for Treatment of Glioblastoma

OBJECTIVES/SPECIFIC AIMS: Glioblastoma (GBM) is a brain cancer with a devastatingly short overall survival of under two years. The poor prognosis of GBM is largely due to cell invasion and maintenance of cancer initiating cells that evade the brain’s innate and adaptive immune responses which enable...

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Autores principales: Spatz, Jordan Matthew, Wu, Ming Ru, Weisinger, Karen, Lu, Tim, Aghi, Manish
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cambridge University Press 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6799755/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cts.2019.355
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author Spatz, Jordan Matthew
Wu, Ming Ru
Weisinger, Karen
Lu, Tim
Aghi, Manish
author_facet Spatz, Jordan Matthew
Wu, Ming Ru
Weisinger, Karen
Lu, Tim
Aghi, Manish
author_sort Spatz, Jordan Matthew
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVES/SPECIFIC AIMS: Glioblastoma (GBM) is a brain cancer with a devastatingly short overall survival of under two years. The poor prognosis of GBM is largely due to cell invasion and maintenance of cancer initiating cells that evade the brain’s innate and adaptive immune responses which enables escape from surgical resection and drives inevitable recurrence. While targeting the brain’s immune microenvironment has long been proposed as a strategy for treating GBM, translational progress has been slow, underscoring the need to investigate the brain’s immune microenvironment for therapeutic avenues. METHODS/STUDY POPULATION: Recent advancements in tunable synthetic immunomodulatory gene circuits targeting metastatic cancers has demonstrated the novel ability to use engineering principles to induce infiltrative cancer cells to express combinatorial immunomodulatory outputs that enable T-cell killing4. Our central hypothesis is: we will be able to significantly improve survival with a lasting immune-mediated control of GBM by using synthetic immunomodulatory gene circuits driving GBM cells to express a local combination of immunomodulatory proteins: human IL15, a surface T-cell engager, PD-L1-CD3 bispecific antibody, and the protein, LIGHT (TNFRSF14). Importantly, the co-expression of LIGHT and anti-PD-L1 therapies was recently shown to rescue PD-L1 checkpoint blockage in the preclinical models of brain tumors and significant enhance survival outcomes highlighting the benefits of novel combinations of immunomodulatory proteins for treatment of GBM. To identify genes whose expression is dramatically upregulated in GBM compared to normal human brain cells, a pooled of six thousand lentiviral oncogene promoters that drive expression of a red-fluorescent protein has been infected into three human GBM cell lines. RESULTS/ANTICIPATED RESULTS: We have successfully infected our GBM cells and are preparing samples for next generation DNA sequencing to determine highly active promoters in GBM that are not expressed in multiple normal brain cells types, astrocytes and neurons. These chosen promoters will then be used to drive an AND gate logic gene circuit immunotherapy outputs which is currently under development for both in-vitro and in-vivo experiments. DISCUSSION/SIGNIFICANCE OF IMPACT: We anticipate that local expression of multiple immune effectors proteins will significantly enhance tumor control and survival in both synergistic murine and human-murine xenograft pre-clinical models of GBM. Ultimately, our goal is to rapidly translate this technology advance into the clinical trial for adult GBM patients.
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spelling pubmed-67997552019-10-28 3352 Surgical Adjuvant of Immunomodulatory Gene Circuits for Treatment of Glioblastoma Spatz, Jordan Matthew Wu, Ming Ru Weisinger, Karen Lu, Tim Aghi, Manish J Clin Transl Sci Translational Science, Policy, & Health Outcomes Science OBJECTIVES/SPECIFIC AIMS: Glioblastoma (GBM) is a brain cancer with a devastatingly short overall survival of under two years. The poor prognosis of GBM is largely due to cell invasion and maintenance of cancer initiating cells that evade the brain’s innate and adaptive immune responses which enables escape from surgical resection and drives inevitable recurrence. While targeting the brain’s immune microenvironment has long been proposed as a strategy for treating GBM, translational progress has been slow, underscoring the need to investigate the brain’s immune microenvironment for therapeutic avenues. METHODS/STUDY POPULATION: Recent advancements in tunable synthetic immunomodulatory gene circuits targeting metastatic cancers has demonstrated the novel ability to use engineering principles to induce infiltrative cancer cells to express combinatorial immunomodulatory outputs that enable T-cell killing4. Our central hypothesis is: we will be able to significantly improve survival with a lasting immune-mediated control of GBM by using synthetic immunomodulatory gene circuits driving GBM cells to express a local combination of immunomodulatory proteins: human IL15, a surface T-cell engager, PD-L1-CD3 bispecific antibody, and the protein, LIGHT (TNFRSF14). Importantly, the co-expression of LIGHT and anti-PD-L1 therapies was recently shown to rescue PD-L1 checkpoint blockage in the preclinical models of brain tumors and significant enhance survival outcomes highlighting the benefits of novel combinations of immunomodulatory proteins for treatment of GBM. To identify genes whose expression is dramatically upregulated in GBM compared to normal human brain cells, a pooled of six thousand lentiviral oncogene promoters that drive expression of a red-fluorescent protein has been infected into three human GBM cell lines. RESULTS/ANTICIPATED RESULTS: We have successfully infected our GBM cells and are preparing samples for next generation DNA sequencing to determine highly active promoters in GBM that are not expressed in multiple normal brain cells types, astrocytes and neurons. These chosen promoters will then be used to drive an AND gate logic gene circuit immunotherapy outputs which is currently under development for both in-vitro and in-vivo experiments. DISCUSSION/SIGNIFICANCE OF IMPACT: We anticipate that local expression of multiple immune effectors proteins will significantly enhance tumor control and survival in both synergistic murine and human-murine xenograft pre-clinical models of GBM. Ultimately, our goal is to rapidly translate this technology advance into the clinical trial for adult GBM patients. Cambridge University Press 2019-03-27 /pmc/articles/PMC6799755/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cts.2019.355 Text en © The Association for Clinical and Translational Science 2019 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-ncnd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is unaltered and is properly cited. The written permission of Cambridge University Press must be obtained for commercial re-use or in order to create a derivative work.
spellingShingle Translational Science, Policy, & Health Outcomes Science
Spatz, Jordan Matthew
Wu, Ming Ru
Weisinger, Karen
Lu, Tim
Aghi, Manish
3352 Surgical Adjuvant of Immunomodulatory Gene Circuits for Treatment of Glioblastoma
title 3352 Surgical Adjuvant of Immunomodulatory Gene Circuits for Treatment of Glioblastoma
title_full 3352 Surgical Adjuvant of Immunomodulatory Gene Circuits for Treatment of Glioblastoma
title_fullStr 3352 Surgical Adjuvant of Immunomodulatory Gene Circuits for Treatment of Glioblastoma
title_full_unstemmed 3352 Surgical Adjuvant of Immunomodulatory Gene Circuits for Treatment of Glioblastoma
title_short 3352 Surgical Adjuvant of Immunomodulatory Gene Circuits for Treatment of Glioblastoma
title_sort 3352 surgical adjuvant of immunomodulatory gene circuits for treatment of glioblastoma
topic Translational Science, Policy, & Health Outcomes Science
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6799755/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cts.2019.355
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