Engineered immunological niche directs therapeutic development in models of progressive multiple sclerosis
Laila M. Rad, Kevin R. Hughes, Sydney N. Wheeler, Joseph T. Decker, Sophia M. Orbach, Angelica Galvan, Jasmine Thornhill, Kate V. Griffin, Hamza Turkistani, Russell R. Urie, David N. Irani, Lonnie D. Shea, Aaron H. MorrisPrimary progressive multiple sclerosis (MS) is a demyelinating autoimmune disease with only a single class of FDA-approved treatment, B cell depletion. Novel treatments could emerge from a deeper understanding of the interplay between multiple cell types within diseased tissue throughout progression. We initially describe an engineered biomaterial–based immunological niche (IN) as a surrogate for diseased tissue to investigate immune cell function and phenotype dynamics throughout a chronic progressive mouse model of MS. Using these niches, we identify an array of dysregulated CC chemokine signaling as potential targets. We then develop antigen-loaded nanoparticles that reduce CC chemokine signaling, while delivering antigen. These nanoparticles serve as an antigen-specific treatment, and a single injection reduces disease burden, even if administered after symptomatic disease onset. This report demonstrates proof of principle of a biomaterial scaffold as a diseased tissue surrogate that can monitor immune function, identify potential drug targets, and guide the development of a therapeutic.