| Literature DB >> 28772190 |
Jonathan J Cho1, Joshua M Stewart2, Theodore T Drashansky1, Maigan A Brusko2, Ashley N Zuniga1, Kyle J Lorentsen1, Benjamin G Keselowsky3, Dorina Avram4.
Abstract
Antigen-specific treatments are highly desirable for autoimmune diseases in contrast to treatments which induce systemic immunosuppression. A novel antigen-specific therapy has been developed which, when administered semi-therapeutically, is highly efficacious in the treatment of the mouse model for multiple sclerosis, experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE). The treatment uses dual-sized, polymeric microparticles (dMPs) loaded with specific antigen and tolerizing factors for intra- and extra-cellular delivery, designed to recruit and modulate dendritic cells toward a tolerogenic phenotype without systemic release. This approach demonstrated robust efficacy and provided complete protection against disease. Therapeutic efficacy required encapsulation of the factors in controlled-release microparticles and was antigen-specific. Disease blocking was associated with a reduction of infiltrating CD4+ T cells, inflammatory cytokine-producing pathogenic CD4+ T cells, and activated macrophages and microglia in the central nervous system. Furthermore, CD4+ T cells isolated from dMP-treated mice were anergic in response to disease-specific, antigen-loaded splenocytes. Additionally, the frequency of CD86hiMHCIIhi dendritic cells in draining lymph nodes of EAE mice treated with Ag-specific dMPs was reduced. Our findings highlight the efficacy of microparticle-based drug delivery platform to mediate antigen-specific tolerance, and suggest that such a multi-factor combinatorial approach can act to block autoimmunity.Entities:
Keywords: Ag-specific; Drug delivery; EAE; Immunotherapy; Multiple sclerosis; PLGA-microparticles
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28772190 PMCID: PMC5870833 DOI: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2017.07.029
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomaterials ISSN: 0142-9612 Impact factor: 12.479