Engineering Immunological Tolerance Using Quantum Dots to Tune the Density of Self‐Antigen Display |
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Authors: | Krystina L. Hess Eunkeu Oh Lisa H. Tostanoski James I. Andorko Kimihiro Susumu Jeffrey R. Deschamps Igor L. Medintz Christopher M. Jewell |
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Affiliation: | 1. Fischell Department of Bioengineering, University of Maryland, College Park, MD, USA;2. Optical Sciences Division, Code 5600, U.S. Naval Research Laboratory, Washington, DC, USA;3. Sotera Defense Solutions, Inc., Columbia, MD, USA;4. Center for Bio/Molecular Science and Engineering Code 6900, U.S. Naval Research Laboratory, Washington, DC, USA;5. Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of Maryland Medical School, Baltimore, MD, USA;6. Marlene and Stewart Greenebaum Cancer Center, Baltimore, MD, USA;7. U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, Baltimore, MD, USA |
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Abstract: | Treatments for autoimmunity—diseases where the immune system mistakenly attacks self‐molecules—are not curative and leave patients immunocompromised. New studies aimed at more specific treatments reveal that development of inflammation or tolerance is influenced by the form in which self‐antigens are presented. Using a mouse model of multiple sclerosis (MS), it is shown for the first time that quantum dots (QDs) can be used to generate immunological tolerance by controlling the density of self‐antigen on QDs. These assemblies display dense arrangements of myelin self‐peptide associated with disease in MS, are uniform in size (<20 nm), and allow direct visualization in immune tissues. Peptide‐QDs rapidly concentrate in draining lymph nodes, colocalizing with macrophages expressing scavenger receptors involved in tolerance. Treatment with peptide‐QDs reduces disease incidence tenfold. Strikingly, the degree of tolerance—and the underlying expansion of regulatory T cells—correlates with the density of myelin molecules presented on QDs. A key discovery is that higher numbers of tolerogenic particles displaying lower levels of self‐peptide are more effective for inducing tolerance than fewer particles each displaying higher densities of peptide. QDs conjugated with self‐antigens can serve as a new platform to induce tolerance, while visualizing QD therapeutics in tolerogenic tissue domains. |
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Keywords: | autoimmunity and tolerance modeling and simulation quantum dots and nanoparticles theranostics vaccines and immunotherapy |
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