Matthias T. Stephan
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
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Featured researches published by Matthias T. Stephan.
Nature Medicine | 2010
Matthias T. Stephan; James J. Moon; Soong Ho Um; Anna Bershteyn; Darrell J. Irvine
A major limitation of cell therapies is the rapid decline in viability and function of the transplanted cells. Here we describe a strategy to enhance cell therapy via the conjugation of adjuvant drug–loaded nanoparticles to the surfaces of therapeutic cells. With this method of providing sustained pseudoautocrine stimulation to donor cells, we elicited marked enhancements in tumor elimination in a model of adoptive T cell therapy for cancer. We also increased the in vivo repopulation rate of hematopoietic stem cell grafts with very low doses of adjuvant drugs that were ineffective when given systemically. This approach is a simple and generalizable strategy to augment cytoreagents while minimizing the systemic side effects of adjuvant drugs. In addition, these results suggest therapeutic cells are promising vectors for actively targeted drug delivery.
Blood | 2010
Il-Kang Na; John C. Markley; Jennifer J. Tsai; Nury Yim; Bradley J. Beattie; Alexander D. Klose; Amanda M. Holland; Arnab Ghosh; Uttam K. Rao; Matthias T. Stephan; Inna Serganova; Elmer Santos; Renier J. Brentjens; Ronald G. Blasberg; Michel Sadelain; Marcel R.M. van den Brink
We have developed a dual bioluminescent reporter system allowing noninvasive, concomitant imaging of T-cell trafficking, expansion, and activation of nuclear factor of activated T cells (NFAT) in vivo. NFAT activation plays an important role in T-cell activation and T-cell development. Therefore we used this system to determine spatial-temporal activation patterns of (1) proliferating T lymphocytes during graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) and (2) T-cell precursors during T-cell development after allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT). In the first days after HSCT, donor T cells migrated to the peripheral lymph nodes and the intestines, whereas the NFAT activation was dominant in the intestines, suggesting an important role for the intestines in the early stages of alloactivation during development of GVHD. After adoptive transfer of in vitro-derived T-cell receptor (TCR) H-Y transgenic T-cell precursors into B6 (H-2(b)) hosts of both sexes, NFAT signaling and development into CD4(+) or CD8(+) single-positive cells could only be detected in the thymus of female recipients indicating either absence of positive selection or prompt depletion of double-positive thymocytes in the male recipients. Because NFAT plays an important role in a wide range of cell types, our system could provide new insights into a variety of biologic processes.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2017
Tyrel T. Smith; Howell F. Moffett; Sirkka B. Stephan; Cary Francis Opel; Amy G. Dumigan; Xiuyun Jiang; Venu G. Pillarisetty; Smitha P. S. Pillai; K. Dane Wittrup; Matthias T. Stephan
Therapies using T cells that are programmed to express chimeric antigen receptors (CAR T cells) consistently produce positive results in patients with hematologic malignancies. However, CAR T cell treatments are less effective in solid tumors for several reasons. First, lymphocytes do not efficiently target CAR T cells; second, solid tumors create an immunosuppressive microenvironment that inactivates T cell responses; and third, solid cancers are typified by phenotypic diversity and thus include cells that do not express proteins targeted by the engineered receptors, enabling the formation of escape variants that elude CAR T cell targeting. Here, we have tested implantable biopolymer devices that deliver CAR T cells directly to the surfaces of solid tumors, thereby exposing them to high concentrations of immune cells for a substantial time period. In immunocompetent orthotopic mouse models of pancreatic cancer and melanoma, we found that CAR T cells can migrate from biopolymer scaffolds and eradicate tumors more effectively than does systemic delivery of the same cells. We have also demonstrated that codelivery of stimulator of IFN genes (STING) agonists stimulates immune responses to eliminate tumor cells that are not recognized by the adoptively transferred lymphocytes. Thus, these devices may improve the effectiveness of CAR T cell therapy in solid tumors and help protect against the emergence of escape variants.
Nano Today | 2011
Matthias T. Stephan; Darrell J. Irvine
Nature Biotechnology | 2015
Sirkka B. Stephan; Alexandria M Taber; Ilona Jileaeva; Ericka P Pegues; Charles L. Sentman; Matthias T. Stephan
Cancer Cell | 2015
Eric F. Zhu; Shuning A. Gai; Cary Francis Opel; Byron Hua Kwan; Rishi Surana; Martin C. Mihm; Monique J. Kauke; Kelly D. Moynihan; Alessandro Angelini; Robert T. Williams; Matthias T. Stephan; Jacob S. Kim; Michael B. Yaffe; Darrell J. Irvine; Louis M. Weiner; Glenn Dranoff; K. Dane Wittrup
Nature Nanotechnology | 2017
Tyrel T. Smith; Sirkka B. Stephan; Howell F. Moffett; Laura E. McKnight; Weihang Ji; Diana Reiman; Emmy Bonagofski; Martin E. Wohlfahrt; Smitha P. S. Pillai; Matthias T. Stephan
Journal of Controlled Release | 2013
Yiran Zheng; Matthias T. Stephan; S. Annie Gai; Wuhbet Abraham; Adrianne Shearer; Darrell J. Irvine
Archive | 2009
Darrell J. Irvine; Matthias T. Stephan; Jaehyun Moon; Anna Bershteyn
Elsevier | 2013
Yiran Zheng; Matthias T. Stephan; S. Annie Gai; Wuhbet Abraham; Adrianne Shearer; Darrell J. Irvine