Abstract
Primary 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.
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Rad, L. M., Hughes, K. R., Wheeler, S. N., Decker, J. T., Orbach, S. M., Galvan, A., … Morris, A. H. (2025). Engineered immunological niche directs therapeutic development in models of progressive multiple sclerosis. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 122(7). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2409852122
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