4.8 Article

Bioinspired Preservation of Natural Killer Cells for Cancer Immunotherapy

Journal

ADVANCED SCIENCE
Volume 6, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/advs.201802045

Keywords

bioinspired materials; biopreservation; cryoprotectants; immunotherapy; natural killer cells

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01EB015776]
  2. Department of Defense SBIR [W81XWH-15-C-0114]

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The ability to cryopreserve natural killer (NK) cells has a significant potential in modern cancer immunotherapy. Current cryopreservation protocols cause deterioration in NK cell viability and functionality. This work reports the preservation of human cytokine-activated NK cell viability and function following cryopreservation using a cocktail of biocompatible bioinspired cryoprotectants (i.e., dextran and carboxylated epsilon-poly-L-lysine). Results demonstrate that the recovered NK cells after cryopreservation and rewarming maintain their viability immediately after thawing at a comparable level to control (dimethyl sulfoxide-based cryopreservation). Although, their viability drops in the first day in culture compared to controls, the cells grow back to a comparable level to controls after 1 week in culture. In addition, the anti-tumor functional activity of recovered NK cells demonstrates higher cytotoxic potency against leukemia cells compared to control. This approach presents a new direction for NK cell preservation, focusing on function and potentially enabling storage and distribution for cancer immunotherapy.

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