Engineers have created a functional, synthetic immune organ that produces antibodies and can be controlled in the lab, completely separate from a living organism.
The engineered organ has implications for everything from rapid production of immune therapies to new frontiers in cancer or infectious disease research.
The first-of-its-kind immune organoid comes from the lab of Ankur Singh, assistant professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering at Cornell University, who applies engineering principles to the study and manipulation of the human immune system. The work appears online in Biomaterials.
The synthetic organ is bio-inspired by secondary immune organs like the lymph node or spleen. It is made from gelatin-based biomaterials reinforced with nanoparticles and seeded with cells, and it mimics the anatomical microenvironment of lymphoid tissue.
B cells to germinal centers
Like a real organ, the organoid converts B cells—which make antibodies that respond to infectious invaders—into germinal centers, which are clusters of B cells that activate, mature, and mutate their antibody genes when the body is under attack. Germinal centers are a sign of infection and are not present in healthy immune organs.
The engineers have demonstrated how they can control this immune response in the organ and tune how quickly the B cells proliferate, get activated, and change their antibody types. According to their paper, their 3D organ outperforms existing 2D cultures and can produce activated B cells up to 100 times faster.
The immune organ, made of a hydrogel, is a soft, nanocomposite biomaterial. The engineers reinforced the material with silicate nanoparticles to keep the structure from melting at the physiologically relevant temperature of 98.6 degrees.
The organ could lead to increased understanding of B cell functions, an area of study that typically relies on animal models to observe how the cells develop and mature.
Studying infections
What’s more, Singh says, the organ could be used to study specific infections and how the body produces antibodies to fight those infections—such as Ebola and HIV.
“You can use our system to force the production of immunotherapeutics at much faster rates,” he says. Such a system also could be used to test toxic chemicals and environmental factors that contribute to infections or organ malfunctions.
The process of B cells becoming germinal centers is not well understood, and in fact, when the body makes mistakes in the genetic rearrangement related to this process, blood cancer can result.
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“In the long run, we anticipate that the ability to drive immune reaction ex vivo at controllable rates grants us the ability to reproduce immunological events with tunable parameters for better mechanistic understanding of B cell development and generation of B cell tumors, as well as screening and translation of new classes of drugs,” Singh says.
The work resulted from a long-standing collaboration with hematology and medical oncology expert Leandro Cerchietti, assistant professor of medicine at Weill Cornell Medical College, and Akhilesh Gaharwar, assistant professor of biomedical engineering at Texas A&M University.
The National Institutes of Health, the Cornell and Weill Cornell seed grant program, and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute supported the work.
Source: Cornell University