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"Meraz, Ismail M."
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Correction: Multivalent Presentation of MPL by Porous Silicon Microparticles Favors T Helper 1 Polarization Enhancing the Anti-Tumor Efficacy of Doxorubicin Nanoliposomes
2024
Mice were evaluated for tumor size (calipers) and signs of distress (coat appearance, activity level, weight loss, shaking or posture changes). Combination therapy is superior to single agent therapy in a mouse model of breast cancer. a) 4T1 tumor growth in BALB/c mice was monitored using calipers. Control verses MPL-pSi, *p<0.05, n = 3–5/group. b) Final mass of excised tumor. c) Images showing the relative size of extracted tumors and spleens. d) Mice were imaged weekly using the IVIS imaging system five min following injection with luciferin. e) Caliper-derived tumor volume measurements over time for BALB/c mice treated intravenously with low dose DOX-NPs in the presence or absence of MPL-pSi microparticles (5×108) (time of microparticle injections indicated by arrows; DOX-NPs verses DOX-NPs plus MPL-pSi, *p<0.05, n = 3–4/group). f) Final weights of excised tumors, *p<0.05. g) Relative size of excised tumors and spleens. h) Weekly IVIS imaging of mice injected with luciferin. i) Quantitation of the bioluminescence data is presented as total flux in protons/sec. j) Increase in tumor growth blockade due to MPL-pSi microparticles (red) over that induced by DOX-NPs (blue) shown graphically across time. k) Similar to A & E, 4T1 tumor growth was monitored in BALB/c mice using calipers.
Journal Article
TUSC2 immunogene enhances efficacy of chemo-immuno combination on KRAS/LKB1 mutant NSCLC in humanized mouse model
2022
KRAS/LKB1 (STK11) NSCLC metastatic tumors are intrinsically resistant to anti-PD-1 or PD-L1 immunotherapy. In this study, we use a humanized mouse model to show that while carboplatin plus pembrolizumab reduce tumor growth moderately and transiently, the addition of the tumor suppressor gene TUSC2, delivered systemically in nanovesicles, to this combination, eradicates tumors in the majority of animals. Immunoprofiling of the tumor microenvironment shows the addition of TUSC2 mediates: (a) significant infiltration of reconstituted human functional cytotoxic T cells, natural killer cells, and dendritic cells; (b) induction of antigen-specific T cell responses; (c) enrichment of functional central and memory effector T cells; and (d) decreased levels of PD-1
+
T cells, myeloid-derived suppressor cells, Tregs, and M2 tumor associated macrophages. Depletion studies show the presence of functional central and memory effector T cells are required for the efficacy. TUSC2 sensitizes KRAS/LKB1 tumors to carboplatin plus pembrolizumab through modulation of the immune contexture towards a pro-immune tumor microenvironment.
Meraz et al. explore the antitumor efficacy of TUSC2 tumor suppressor genetherapy via nanovisicles in combination with carboplatin and pembrolizumab against KRAS-LKB1 mutant NSCLC in humanized mouse model. They demonstrate a robust response and perform immune profiling studies, which show the development of a cytotoxic T cell effector response and effector memory cells.
Journal Article
Patient-derived tumor immune microenvironments in patient-derived xenografts of lung cancer
by
Zhang, Ran
,
Wang, Li
,
Swisher, Stephen G.
in
Analysis
,
Animal models
,
Biomedical and Life Sciences
2018
Background
Because patient-derived xenografts (PDXs) are grown in immunodeficient mouse strains, PDXs are regarded as lacking an immune microenvironment. However, whether patients’ immune cells co-exist in PDXs remains uncharacterized.
Methods
We cultured small pieces of lung PDX tissue in media containing human interleukin-2 and characterized the proliferated lymphocytes by flow cytometric assays with antibodies specific for human immune cell surface markers. Presence of immune cells in PDXs was also determined by immunohistochemical staining.
Results
Human tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) were cultured from nine of 25 PDX samples (36%). The mean time of PDX growth in immunodeficient mice before obtaining TILs in culture was 113 days (range 63–292 days). The TILs detected in PDXs were predominantly human CD8
+
T cells, CD4
+
T cells, or CD19
+
B cells, depending on cases. DNA fingerprint analysis showed that the TILs originated from the same patients as the PDXs. Further analysis of two PDX-derived CD8
+
T cells showed that they were PD-1
−
, CD45RO
+
, and either CD62L
+
or CD62L
−
, suggesting they were likely memory T cells. Immunohistochemical staining showed that human T cells (CD8
+
or CD4
+
), B cells (CD19
+
), and macrophages (CD68
+
) were present in stroma or intraepithelial cancer structures and that human PD-L1 was expressed in stromal cells. Moreover, the patient-derived immune cells in PDX can be passaged to the F2 generation and may migrate to spleens of PDX-bearing mice.
Conclusions
Patient-derived immune cells co-exist in early passages of PDXs in some lung cancer PDX models. The CD8
+
cells from PDXs were likely memory T cells. These results suggest that PDXs can be used for evaluating the functionality of immune components in tumor microenvironments.
Journal Article
Multivalent Presentation of MPL by Porous Silicon Microparticles Favors T Helper 1 Polarization Enhancing the Anti-Tumor Efficacy of Doxorubicin Nanoliposomes
by
Yokoi, Kenji
,
Rhudy, Jessica R.
,
Lavelle, Ed C.
in
Adjuvants, Immunologic - chemistry
,
Adjuvants, Immunologic - pharmacology
,
Animals
2014
Porous silicon (pSi) microparticles, in diverse sizes and shapes, can be functionalized to present pathogen-associated molecular patterns that activate dendritic cells. Intraperitoneal injection of MPL-adsorbed pSi microparticles, in contrast to free MPL, resulted in the induction of local inflammation, reflected in the recruitment of neutrophils, eosinophils and proinflammatory monocytes, and the depletion of resident macrophages and mast cells at the injection site. Injection of microparticle-bound MPL resulted in enhanced secretion of the T helper 1 associated cytokines IFN-γ and TNF-α by peritoneal exudate and lymph node cells in response to secondary stimuli while decreasing the anti-inflammatory cytokine IL-10. MPL-pSi microparticles independently exhibited anti-tumor effects and enhanced tumor suppression by low dose doxorubicin nanoliposomes. Intravascular injection of the MPL-bound microparticles increased serum IL-1β levels, which was blocked by the IL-1 receptor antagonist Anakinra. The microparticles also potentiated tumor infiltration by dendritic cells, cytotoxic T lymphocytes, and F4/80+ macrophages, however, a specific reduction was observed in CD204+ macrophages.
Journal Article
A New Imaging Platform for Visualizing Biological Effects of Non-Invasive Radiofrequency Electric-Field Cancer Hyperthermia
2015
Herein, we present a novel imaging platform to study the biological effects of non-invasive radiofrequency (RF) electric field cancer hyperthermia. This system allows for real-time in vivo intravital microscopy (IVM) imaging of radiofrequency-induced biological alterations such as changes in vessel structure and drug perfusion. Our results indicate that the IVM system is able to handle exposure to high-power electric-fields without inducing significant hardware damage or imaging artifacts. Furthermore, short durations of low-power (< 200 W) radiofrequency exposure increased transport and perfusion of fluorescent tracers into the tumors at temperatures below 41°C. Vessel deformations and blood coagulation were seen for tumor temperatures around 44°C. These results highlight the use of our integrated IVM-RF imaging platform as a powerful new tool to visualize the dynamics and interplay between radiofrequency energy and biological tissues, organs, and tumors.
Journal Article
3-Phosphoinositide-dependent kinase 1 drives acquired resistance to osimertinib
by
Shpall, Elizabeth
,
Majidi, Mourad
,
Song, Renduo
in
1-Phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase
,
13/1
,
13/106
2023
Osimertinib sensitive and resistant NSCLC NCI-H1975 clones are used to model osimertinib acquired resistance in humanized and non-humanized mice and delineate potential resistance mechanisms. No new EGFR mutations or loss of the EGFR T790M mutation are found in resistant clones. Resistant tumors grown under continuous osimertinib pressure both in humanized and non-humanized mice show aggressive tumor regrowth which is significantly less sensitive to osimertinib as compared with parental tumors. 3-phosphoinositide-dependent kinase 1 (PDK1) is identified as a potential driver of osimertinib acquired resistance, and its selective inhibition by BX795 and CRISPR gene knock out, sensitizes resistant clones. In-vivo inhibition of PDK1 enhances the osimertinib sensitivity against osimertinib resistant xenograft and a patient derived xenograft (PDX) tumors. PDK1 knock-out dysregulates PI3K/Akt/mTOR signaling, promotes cell cycle arrest at the G1 phase. Yes-associated protein (YAP) and active-YAP are upregulated in resistant tumors, and PDK1 knock-out inhibits nuclear translocation of YAP. Higher expression of PDK1 and an association between PDK1 and YAP are found in patients with progressive disease following osimertinib treatment. PDK1 is a central upstream regulator of two critical drug resistance pathways: PI3K/AKT/mTOR and YAP.
Acquired resistance to osimertinib is driven by PDK1 in preclinical models of non-small cell lung cancer and reveals PDK1 as a potential target for restoring osimertinib sensitivity.
Journal Article
Focal adhesion kinase-YAP signaling axis drives drug-tolerant persister cells and residual disease in lung cancer
2024
Targeted therapy is effective in many tumor types including lung cancer, the leading cause of cancer mortality. Paradigm defining examples are targeted therapies directed against non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) subtypes with oncogenic alterations in EGFR, ALK and KRAS. The success of targeted therapy is limited by drug-tolerant persister cells (DTPs) which withstand and adapt to treatment and comprise the residual disease state that is typical during treatment with clinical targeted therapies. Here, we integrate studies in patient-derived and immunocompetent lung cancer models and clinical specimens obtained from patients on targeted therapy to uncover a focal adhesion kinase (FAK)-YAP signaling axis that promotes residual disease during oncogenic EGFR-, ALK-, and KRAS-targeted therapies. FAK-YAP signaling inhibition combined with the primary targeted therapy suppressed residual drug-tolerant cells and enhanced tumor responses. This study unveils a FAK-YAP signaling module that promotes residual disease in lung cancer and mechanism-based therapeutic strategies to improve tumor response.
Remaining drug-tolerant persistent (DTP) cancer cells limit the efficacy of targeted therapy in EGFR, ALK and KRAS mutant non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Here, the authors show that focal adhesion kinase (FAK)-YAP signalling supports DTP cells promoting residual disease and targeting this pathway improved tumour response in NSCLC preclinical models.
Journal Article
NPRL2 gene therapy induces effective antitumor immunity in KRAS/STK11 mutant anti-PD1 resistant metastatic non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) in a humanized mouse model
by
Shpall, Elizabeth J
,
Majidi, Mourad
,
Meraz, Ismail M
in
Animals
,
anti-PD1 resistance
,
Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized
2025
Expression of NPRL2/TUSC4 , a tumor-suppressor gene, is reduced in many cancers including NSCLC. Restoration of NPRL2 induces DNA damage, apoptosis, and cell-cycle arrest. We investigated NPRL2 antitumor immune responses in aPD1 R / KRAS/STK11 mt NSCLC in humanized-mice. Humanized-mice were generated by transplanting fresh human cord blood-derived CD34 stem cells into sub-lethally irradiated NSG mice. Lung-metastases were developed from KRAS/STK11 mt /aPD1 R A549 cells and treated with NPRL2 w/wo pembrolizumab. NPRL2 -treatment reduced lung metastases significantly, whereas pembrolizumab was ineffective. Antitumor effect was greater in humanized than non-humanized-mice. NPRL2 + pembrolizumab was not synergistic in KRAS/STK11 mt /aPD1 R tumors but was synergistic in KRAS wt /aPD1 S H1299. NPRL2 also showed a significant antitumor effect on KRAS mt /aPD1 R LLC2 syngeneic-tumors. The antitumor effect was correlated with increased infiltration of human cytotoxic-T, HLA-DR + DC, CD11c + DC, and downregulation of myeloid and regulatory-T cells in TME. Antitumor effect was abolished upon in-vivo depletion of CD8-T, macrophages, and CD4-T cells whereas remained unaffected upon NK-cell depletion. A distinctive protein-expression profile was found after NPRL2 treatment. IFNγ, CD8b , and TBX21 associated with T-cell functions were significantly increased, whereas FOXP3, TGFB1/B2 , and IL-10RA were strongly inhibited by NPRL2 . A list of T-cell co-inhibitory molecules was also downregulated. Restoration of NPRL2 exhibited significantly slower tumor growth in humanized-mice, which was associated with increased presence of human cytotoxic-T, and DC and decreased percentage of Treg, MDSC, and TAM in TME. NPRL2 -stable cells showed a substantial increase in colony-formation inhibition and heightened sensitivity to carboplatin. Stable-expression of NPRL2 resulted in the downregulation of MAPK and AKT-mTOR signaling. Taken-together, NPRL2 gene-therapy induces antitumor activity on KRAS/STK11 mt /aPD1 R tumors through DC-mediated antigen-presentation and cytotoxic immune-cell activation.
Journal Article
Characterization of Free and Porous Silicon-Encapsulated Superparamagnetic Iron Oxide Nanoparticles as Platforms for the Development of Theranostic Vaccines
2014
Tracking vaccine components from the site of injection to their destination in lymphatic tissue, and simultaneously monitoring immune effects, sheds light on the influence of vaccine components on particle and immune cell trafficking and therapeutic efficacy. In this study, we create a hybrid particle vaccine platform comprised of porous silicon (pSi) and superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles (SPIONs). The impact of nanoparticle size and mode of presentation on magnetic resonance contrast enhancement are examined. SPION-enhanced relaxivity increased as the core diameter of the nanoparticle increased, while encapsulation of SPIONs within a pSi matrix had only minor effects on T2 and no significant effect on T2* relaxation. Following intravenous injection of single and hybrid particles, there was an increase in negative contrast in the spleen, with changes in contrast being slightly greater for free compared to silicon encapsulated SPIONs. Incubation of bone marrow-derived dendritic cells (BMDC) with pSi microparticles loaded with SPIONs, SIINFEKL peptide, and lipopolysaccharide stimulated immune cell interactions and interferon gamma production in OT-1 TCR transgenic CD8+ T cells. Overall, the hybrid particle platform enabled presentation of a complex payload that was traceable, stimulated functional T cell and BMDC interactions, and resolved in cellular activation of T cells in response to a specific antigen.
Journal Article