| Literature DB >> 30713696 |
Xingzhi Liu1, Hongbo Zhang2,3,4,5,6, Ruoyu Cheng1, Yanzheng Gu1, Yin Yin4, Zhiyong Sun1, Guoqing Pan1, Zhongbin Deng7, Huilin Yang1, Lianfu Deng2,3, Wenguo Cui2,3, Hélder A Santos8,9, Qin Shi1,10.
Abstract
Antibody-based cancer immune therapy has attracted lots of research interest in recent years; however, it is greatly limited by the easy distribution and burst release of antibodies. In addition, after the clearance of the tissue, healthy tissue regeneration is another challenge for cancer treatment. Herein, we have developed a specific immunological tissue engineering scaffold using the agonistic mouse anti-human CD40 antibody (CD40mAb) incorporated into poly(l-lactide) (PLLA) electrospun fibers through the dopamine (PDA) motif (PLLA-PDA-CD40mAb). CD40mAb is successfully incorporated onto the surface of the electrospun fibrous scaffold, which is proved by immunofluorescence staining, and the PLLA-PDA-CD40mAb scaffold has an anti-tumor effect by locally releasing CD40mAb. Therefore, this immunological electrospun scaffold has very good potential to be developed as a powerful tool for localized tumor treatment, and this is the first to be reported in this area.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30713696 PMCID: PMC6333278 DOI: 10.1039/c8mh00704g
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mater Horiz ISSN: 2051-6347 Impact factor: 13.266
Scheme 1The pipeline of CD40mAb-grafted electrospun fibrous scaffolds for anti-cancer therapy and tissue regeneration. (I) Released CD40mAb directly induces tumor cell apoptosis. (II) Released CD40mAb activates dendritic cells (DCs) to initiate adaptive immune response to kill tumor cells indirectly. (III) PLLA-PDA scaffolds provide physical support for healthy cell regeneration.
Fig. 1Characterization of the PLLA-PDA-CD40mAb scaffold. (a) The cartoon of PLLA electrospun fibrous scaffolds with the antibody grafted through PDA. (b) The morphologies of the different scaffolds under a SEM. (The insets present contact angles, which represent the polar properties of the scaffolds.) (c) XPS. (d) Stress–strain curves. (e) WCA (compared with the PLLA group *p < 0.05).
Fig. 2The anti-proliferation effect of CD40mAb released from PLLA-PDA-CD40mAb scaffolds for 24 h towards MDA-MB-231 cells. (a) Cell viability of MDA-MB-231. (b) The relative gene expressions of Bax and Bcl-2 of MDA-MB-231 cells (data are represented as fold changes normalized by cells cultured in cell medium). (c) Flow cytometry assay (FCA) for MDA-MB-231 cell apoptosis. Control: cells seeding onto the plate (compared with the PLLA group; *p < 0.05).
Fig. 3CD40mAb released from the PLLA-PDA-CD40mAb scaffold activates DCs from PBMCs. (a) The morphology of DCs and (b) the expressions of CD11c and HLA-DR. Control: cells seeded into culture medium without cytokines and antibodies. MFI: median fluorescence intensity. The proliferation effect of PLLA-PDA-CD40mAb on MC3T3-E1 cells. (c) SEM images of MC3T3-E1 cells seeded onto the electrospun PLLA-PDA, PLLA-PDA-IgG and PLLA-PDA-CD40mAb scaffolds for 3 d. (d) Live/dead staining of MC3T3-E1 cells seeded onto the electrospun PLLA-PDA, PLLA-PDA-IgG and PLLA-PDA-CD40mAb scaffolds for 3 d. (e) CCK-8 assay of MC3T3-E1 cells cultured in the released buffer (24 h) for 1, 3, and 5 d. (f) CCK-8 assay of MC3T3-E1 cells cultured in the released buffer (12, 24, 48 h) for 3 d – A: 12 h, B: 24 h, C: 48 h. Control: MC3T3-E1 cells seeded onto the plate with cell culture medium.
Fig. 4In vivo anticancer efficiency of PLLA-PDA-CD40mAb membranes. (a) The representative photographs of the tumors after various treatments and quantification of tumor masses in the different groups indicated. (b) The volumes of tumor masses. (c) H&E stained images, immunohistochemical analysis and TUNEL apoptosis assay (green: apoptotic cells; blue: nuclei) of tumor tissues after membrane-treated therapy. (d) Quantification of the expression of Ki67, TUNEL, H&E assay (***p < 0.001).