3.8 Article

Robust Antigen-Specific T Cell Activation within Injectable 3D Synthetic Nanovaccine Depots

Journal

ACS BIOMATERIALS SCIENCE & ENGINEERING
Volume 7, Issue 12, Pages 5622-5632

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsbiomaterials.0c01648

Keywords

biomaterial-based scaffolds; nanoparticles; cancer vaccination; dendritic cells; antigen-specific T cells

Funding

  1. NWO Gravity Program Institute for Chemical Immunology
  2. Oncode Institute
  3. NWO Spinoza award
  4. ERC [834618, 269019]
  5. ERC Starting grant CHEMCHECK [679921]
  6. Gravity Program Institute for Chemical Immunology tenure track grant by NWO
  7. European Research Council (ERC) [269019, 834618, 679921] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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Synthetic cancer vaccines deliver tumor antigens and adjuvants to dendritic cells, enhancing anticancer immune responses. Three-dimensional scaffolds enable sustained delivery of these materials to dendritic cells, but current systems lack control over cargo release profiles.
Synthetic cancer vaccines may boost anticancer immune responses by co-delivering tumor antigens and adjuvants to dendritic cells (DCs). The accessibility of cancer vaccines to DCs and thereby the delivery efficiency of antigenic material greatly depends on the vaccine platform that is used. Three-dimensional scaffolds have been developed to deliver antigens and adjuvants locally in an immunostimulatory environment to DCs to enable sustained availability. However, current systems have little control over the release profiles of the cargo that is incorporated and are often characterized by an initial high-burst release. Here, an alternative system is designed that co-delivers antigens and adjuvants to DCs through cargo-loaded nanoparticles (NPs) incorporated within biomaterial-based scaffolds. This creates a programmable system with the potential for controlled delivery of their cargo to DCs. Cargo-loaded poly(D,L-lactic-co-glycolic acid) NPs are entrapped within the polymer walls of alginate cryogels with high efficiency while retaining the favorable physical properties of cryogels, including syringe injection. DCs cultured within these NP-loaded scaffolds acquire strong antigen-specific T cell-activating capabilities. These findings demonstrate that introduction of NPs into the walls of macroporous alginate cryogels creates a fully synthetic immunostimulatory niche that stimulates DCs and evokes strong antigen-specific T cell responses.

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