Separating T cell targeting components onto magnetically clustered nanoparticles boosts activation

AK Kosmides, K Necochea, JW Hickey, JP Schneck - Nano letters, 2018 - ACS Publications
Nano letters, 2018ACS Publications
T cell activation requires the coordination of a variety of signaling molecules including T cell
receptor-specific signals and costimulatory signals. Altering the composition and distribution
of costimulatory molecules during stimulation greatly affects T cell functionality for
applications such as adoptive cell therapy (ACT), but the large diversity in these molecules
complicates these studies. Here, we develop and validate a reductionist T cell activation
platform that enables streamlined customization of stimulatory conditions. This platform is …
T cell activation requires the coordination of a variety of signaling molecules including T cell receptor-specific signals and costimulatory signals. Altering the composition and distribution of costimulatory molecules during stimulation greatly affects T cell functionality for applications such as adoptive cell therapy (ACT), but the large diversity in these molecules complicates these studies. Here, we develop and validate a reductionist T cell activation platform that enables streamlined customization of stimulatory conditions. This platform is useful for the optimization of ACT protocols as well as the more general study of immune T cell activation. Rather than decorating particles with both signal 1 antigen and signal 2 costimulus, we use distinct, monospecific, paramagnetic nanoparticles, which are then clustered on the cell surface by a magnetic field. This allows for rapid synthesis and characterization of a small number of single-signal nanoparticles which can be systematically combined to explore and optimize T cell activation. By increasing cognate T cell enrichment and incorporating additional costimulatory molecules using this platform, we find significantly higher frequencies and numbers of cognate T cells stimulated from an endogenous population. The magnetic field-induced association of separate particles thus provides a tool for optimizing T cell activation for adoptive immunotherapy and other immunological studies.
ACS Publications