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Dive into the research topics where Huifang Han is active.

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Featured researches published by Huifang Han.


Nature Materials | 2014

Gradated assembly of multiple proteins into supramolecular nanomaterials

Gregory A. Hudalla; Tao Sun; Joshua Z. Gasiorowski; Huifang Han; Ye F. Tian; Anita S. Chong; Joel H. Collier

Biomaterials displaying precise ratios of different bioactive protein components are critical for applications ranging from vaccines to regenerative medicine, but their design is often hindered by limited choices and cross-reactivity of protein conjugation chemistries. Here, we describe a strategy for inducing multiple different expressed proteins of choice to assemble into nanofibers and gels with exceptional compositional control. The strategy employs novel “βTail” tags, which allow for good protein expression in bacteriological cultures, yet can be induced to co-assemble into nanomaterials when mixed with additional β-sheet fibrillizing peptides. Multiple different βTail fusion proteins could be inserted into peptide nanofibers alone or in combination at predictable, smoothly gradated concentrations, providing a simple yet versatile route to install precise combinations of proteins into nanomaterials. The technology is illustrated by achieving precisely targeted hues using mixtures of fluorescent proteins, by creating nanofibers bearing enzymatic activity, and by adjusting antigenic dominance in vaccines.


Advanced Healthcare Materials | 2014

Titrating T-cell epitopes within self-assembled vaccines optimizes CD4+ helper T cell and antibody outputs.

Rebecca R. Pompano; Jianjun Chen; Emily Verbus; Huifang Han; Arthur Fridman; Tessie McNeely; Joel H. Collier; Anita S. Chong

Epitope content plays a critical role in determining T-cell and antibody responses to vaccines, biomaterials, and protein therapeutics, but its effects are nonlinear and difficult to isolate. Here, molecular self-assembly is used to build a vaccine with precise control over epitope content, in order to finely tune the magnitude and phenotype of T helper and antibody responses. Self-adjuvanting peptide nanofibers are formed by co-assembling a high-affinity universal CD4+ T-cell epitope (PADRE) and a B-cell epitope from Staphylococcus aureus at specifiable concentrations. Increasing the PADRE concentration from micromolar to millimolar elicited bell-shaped dose-responses that are unique to different T-cell populations. Notably, the epitope ratios that maximize T follicular helper and antibody responses differed by an order of magnitude from those that maximized Th1 or Th2 responses. Thus, modular materials assembly provides a means of controlling epitope content and efficiently skewing the adaptive immune response in the absence of exogenous adjuvant; this approach may contribute to the development of improved vaccines and immunotherapies.


Biomaterials Science | 2013

Controllably degradable β-sheet nanofibers and gels from self-assembling depsipeptides

Ye F. Tian; Gregory A. Hudalla; Huifang Han; Joel H. Collier

Self-assembled peptide materials have received considerable interest for a range of applications, including 3D cell culture, tissue engineering, and the delivery of cells and drugs. One challenge in applying such materials within these areas has been the extreme stability of β-sheet fibrillized peptides, which are resistant to proteolysis, degradation, and turnover in biological environments. In this study, we designed self-assembling depsipeptides containing ester bonds within the peptide backbone. Beta-sheet fibrillized nanofibers were formed in physiologic conditions, and two of these nanofiber-forming depsipeptides produced hydrogels that degraded controllably over the course of days-to-weeks via ester hydrolysis. With HPLC, TEM, and oscillating rheometry, we show that the rate of hydrolysis can be controlled in a straightforward manner by specifying the amino acid residues surrounding the ester bond. In 3D cell cultures, depsipeptide gels softened over the course of several days and permitted considerably more proliferation and spreading of C3H10T1/2 pluripotent stem cells than non-degradable analogs. This approach now provides a reliable and reproducible means to soften or clear β-sheet fibrillized peptide materials from biological environments.


Biomaterials | 2017

Active immunotherapy for TNF-mediated inflammation using self-assembled peptide nanofibers

Carolina Mora-Solano; Yi Wen; Huifang Han; Jianjun Chen; Anita S. Chong; Michelle L. Miller; Rebecca R. Pompano; Joel H. Collier

Active immunotherapies raising antibody responses against autologous targets are receiving increasing interest as alternatives to the administration of manufactured antibodies. The challenge in such an approach is generating protective and adjustable levels of therapeutic antibodies while at the same time avoiding strong T cell responses that could lead to autoimmune reactions. Here we demonstrate the design of an active immunotherapy against TNF-mediated inflammation using short synthetic peptides that assemble into supramolecular peptide nanofibers. Immunization with these materials, without additional adjuvants, was able to break B cell tolerance and raise protective antibody responses against autologous TNF in mice. The strength of the anti-TNF antibody response could be tuned by adjusting the epitope content in the nanofibers, and the T-cell response was focused on exogenous and non-autoreactive T-cell epitopes. Immunization with unadjuvanted peptide nanofibers was therapeutic in a lethal model of acute inflammation induced by intraperitoneally delivered lipopolysaccharide, whereas formulations adjuvanted with CpG showed comparatively poorer protection that correlated with a more Th1-polarized response. Additionally, immunization with peptide nanofibers did not diminish the ability of mice to clear infections of Listeria monocytogenes. Collectively this work suggests that synthetic self-assembled peptides can be attractive platforms for active immunotherapies against autologous targets.


MedChemComm | 2018

MyD88 in antigen-presenting cells is not required for CD4+ T-cell responses during peptide nanofiber vaccination

Youhui Si; Yi Wen; Jianjun Chen; Rebecca R. Pompano; Huifang Han; Joel H. Collier; Anita S. Chong

Self-assembled peptide nanofibers raise significant antibody and T cell responses without adjuvants, but the mechanism by which they achieve this has not been fully elucidated. Myeloid differentiation primary response gene 88 (MyD88) previously has been shown to be critical for the antibody response to antigens presented by peptide nanofibers. The present study sought to determine the cell subset in which MyD88 is essential for T cell responses. Mice deficient in MyD88 or CD11c+ cells had severely attenuated T cell responses. However, mice lacking MyD88 in only CD11c+ cells remained capable of internalizing, processing, and presenting nanofiber-derived epitopes to stimulate T cell responses. The necessity of inflammasome pathway was ruled out. Using adoptive transfer models where MyD88 was eliminated in CD4+ T cells or in the host, we observed that deficiency only in T cells or only in the host had no impact on the T cell response to nanofiber vaccines. Therefore, knocking out MyD88 in either antigen presenting cells (APCs) or CD4 T cells could not compromise the CD4 T cell responses, suggesting that self-assembled peptide nanofibers trigger redundant MyD88-dependent and MyD88-independent signaling pathways in APCs and T cells. Similar redundancy has been observed for other adjuvants, and this is discussed.


Biomaterials | 2013

The use of self-adjuvanting nanofiber vaccines to elicit high-affinity B cell responses to peptide antigens without inflammation.

Jianjun Chen; Rebecca R. Pompano; Felix W. Santiago; Lea Maillat; Roger Sciammas; Tao Sun; Huifang Han; David J. Topham; Anita S. Chong; Joel H. Collier


ACS Nano | 2016

Switching the Immunogenicity of Peptide Assemblies Using Surface Properties

Yi Wen; Amelia Waltman; Huifang Han; Joel H. Collier


Acta Biomaterialia | 2016

Thermal stability of self-assembled peptide vaccine materials.

Tao Sun; Huifang Han; Gregory A. Hudalla; Yi Wen; Rebecca R. Pompano; Joel H. Collier


Journal of Biomedical Materials Research Part A | 2016

Winner of the Student Award in the Hospital Intern Category, 10th World Biomaterials Congress, May 17–22, 2016, Montreal QC, Canada: Peptide biomaterials raising adaptive immune responses in wound healing contexts

Yalini Vigneswaran; Huifang Han; Roberto De Loera; Yi Wen; Xing Zhang; Tao Sun; Carolina Mora-Solano; Joel H. Collier


Journal of Biomedical Materials Research Part A | 2016

Peptide biomaterials raising adaptive immune responses in wound healing contexts

Yalini Vigneswaran; Huifang Han; Roberto De Loera; Yi Wen; Xing Zhang; Tao Sun; Carolina Mora-Solano; Joel H. Collier

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Yi Wen

University of Chicago

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Tao Sun

University of Chicago

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