Backpack-mediated anti-inflammatory macrophage cell therapy for the treatment of traumatic brain injury

Author:

Kapate Neha123ORCID,Liao Rick12ORCID,Sodemann Ryan Luke4ORCID,Stinson Tawny4ORCID,Prakash Supriya12,Kumbhojkar Ninad12ORCID,Suja Vineeth Chandran12ORCID,Wang Lily Li-Wen123ORCID,Flanz Mikayla1,Rajeev Rohan1,Villafuerte Dania1ORCID,Shaha Suyog12ORCID,Janes Morgan123ORCID,Park Kyung Soo12ORCID,Dunne Michael12ORCID,Golemb Bryan4,Hone Alexander4,Adebowale Kolade12,Clegg John1ORCID,Slate Andrea5,McGuone Declan6ORCID,Costine-Bartell Beth47ORCID,Mitragotri Samir12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Harvard University , Boston, MA 02134 , USA

2. Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering, Harvard University , Boston, MA 02134 , USA

3. Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology , Cambridge, MA 02139 , USA

4. Department of Neurosurgery, Massachusetts General Hospital , Boston, MA 02114 , USA

5. Center of Comparative Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital , Boston, MA 02114 , USA

6. Department of Pathology, Yale School of Medicine , New Haven, CT 06520 , USA

7. Department of Neurosurgery, Harvard Medical School , Boston, MA 02115 , USA

Abstract

Abstract Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a debilitating disease with no current therapies outside of acute clinical management. While acute, controlled inflammation is important for debris clearance and regeneration after injury, chronic, rampant inflammation plays a significant adverse role in the pathophysiology of secondary brain injury. Immune cell therapies hold unique therapeutic potential for inflammation modulation, due to their active sensing and migration abilities. Macrophages are particularly suited for this task, given the role of macrophages and microglia in the dysregulated inflammatory response after TBI. However, maintaining adoptively transferred macrophages in an anti-inflammatory, wound-healing phenotype against the proinflammatory TBI milieu is essential. To achieve this, we developed discoidal microparticles, termed backpacks, encapsulating anti-inflammatory interleukin-4, and dexamethasone for ex vivo macrophage attachment. Backpacks durably adhered to the surface of macrophages without internalization and maintained an anti-inflammatory phenotype of the carrier macrophage through 7 days in vitro. Backpack–macrophage therapy was scaled up and safely infused into piglets in a cortical impact TBI model. Backpack–macrophages migrated to the brain lesion site and reduced proinflammatory activation of microglia in the lesion penumbra of the rostral gyrus of the cortex and decreased serum concentrations of proinflammatory biomarkers. These immunomodulatory effects elicited a 56% decrease in lesion volume. The results reported here demonstrate, to the best of our knowledge, a potential use of a cell therapy intervention for a large animal model of TBI and highlight the potential of macrophage-based therapy. Further investigation is required to elucidate the neuroprotection mechanisms associated with anti-inflammatory macrophage therapy.

Funder

Department of Defense

National Science Foundation

Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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