Yevgeniy Froimchuk - Dissertation Defense

Tuesday, December 13, 2022
11:45 a.m.
AJC 3104 (3rd floor conference room)
Rachel Chang
301 405 8268
rachel53@umd.edu

PhD Dissertation Defense Announcement: Yevgeniy Froimchuk

 

Date: Tuesday, December 13th, 2022

Time: 11:45am

Location: AJC 3104 (3rd floor conference room)

 

Title: Leveraging self-assembly and biophysical design to build next-generation immunotherapies

 

Committee members:

Dr. Christopher Jewell, Chair

Dr. Katharina Maisel

Dr. Silvina Matysiak

Dr. Srinivasa Raghavan

Dr. David Mosser, Dean's Representative

 

Abstract:

The immune system has evolved mechanisms to respond not only to specific molecular signals, but also to biophysical cues. Interestingly, research at the interface of biomaterials and immunology has also revealed that the biophysical properties and form of vaccines and immunotherapies impact immunological outcomes. For example, the intermolecular distance between antigen molecules on the surface of nanoparticles can impact formation of T cell receptor clusters that are critical during T cell activation. Despite the importance of biophysical cues in tuning the immune response, the connections between these parameters and immunological outcomes are poorly understood in the context of immunotherapy.  Immunotherapies harness an individual’s immune system to battle diseases such as autoimmunity. During autoimmune disease, the immune system malfunctions and mistakenly attacks self-tissue. Immunotherapies can help tailor and guide more effective responses in these settings, as evidenced by recent advances with monoclonal antibodies and adoptive cell therapies. However, despite the transformative gains of immunotherapies for patients, many therapies are not curative, work only for a small subset of patients, and lack specificity in distinguishing between healthy and diseased cells, which can cause severe side effects. To overcome these challenges, experimental strategies are attempting to co-deliver self-antigens and modulatory cues to reprogram dysfunctional responses against self-tissue without hindering normal immune function. These strategies have shown exciting potential in pre-clinical models of autoimmune disease but are unproven in clinical research. Understanding how biophysical features are linked to immunological mechanisms in these settings would add a critical dimension to designing translatable, antigen-specific immunotherapies.

Self-assembling materials are a class of biomaterials that spontaneously assemble in aqueous solution. Self-assembling modalities are useful technologies to study the links between biophysical parameters and immune outcomes because they offer precise control and uniformity of the biophysical properties of assembled moieties. Our lab leveraged the benefits of self-assembly to pioneer development of “carrier-free” immunotherapies composed entirely of immune signals. The therapies are composed of self-antigens modified with cationic amino acid residues and anionic, nucleic acid based modulatory cues. These signals are self-assembled into nanostructured complexes via electrostatic interactions. The research in this dissertation utilizes this platform as a tool to understand how tuning the biophysical properties of self-antigens impacts molecular interactions during self-assembly and in turn, how changes in biophysical features are linked to immunological outcomes. Surface plasmon resonance studies revealed that the binding affinity between signals can be tuned by altering overall cationic charge and charge density of self-antigen, and by anchoring the self-antigen with arginine or lysine residues. For example, the binding affinity between signals can be increased by increasing the total cationic charge on the self-antigen, and by anchoring the self-antigen with arginine residues rather than lysine residues. Computational modeling approaches generated insights into how molecular interactions between signals, such as hydrogen bonding, salt-bridges, and hydrophobic interactions, change with different design parameters. In vitro assays revealed that a lower binding affinity between self-assembled signals was associated with greater reduction of inflammatory gene expression in dendritic cells and more differentiation of self-reactive T cells towards regulatory phenotypes that are protective during autoimmunity. Taken all together, these insights help intuit how to use biophysical design to improve modularity of the self-assembly platform to incorporate a range of antigens for distinct disease targets. This granular understanding of nanomaterial-immune interactions contributes to more rational immunotherapy design.

 

 

Audience: Graduate  Undergraduate  Faculty  Staff 

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