Pallab Pradhan
Georgia Institute of Technology
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Publication
Featured researches published by Pallab Pradhan.
Biomaterials | 2014
Pallab Pradhan; Hong Qin; Jardin Leleux; Dongho Gwak; Ippei Sakamaki; Larry W. Kwak; Krishnendu Roy
Success of an immunotherapy for cancer often depends on the critical balance of T helper 1 (Th1) and T helper 2 (Th2) responses driven by antigen presenting cells, specifically dendritic cells (DCs). Th1-driven cytotoxic T cell (CTL) responses are key to eliminating tumor cells. It is well established that CpG oligonucleotides (ODN), a widely studied Toll-like receptor 9 (TLR9) agonist, used to enhance Th1 response, also induces high levels of the anti-inflammatory, Th2-promoting cytokine IL10, which could dampen the resulting Th1 response. Biomaterials-based immunomodulatory strategies that can reduce IL10 production while maintaining IL12 levels during CpG delivery could further enhance the Th1/Th2 cytokine balance and improve anti-tumor immune response. Here we report that dual-delivery of IL10-silencing siRNA along with CpG ODN to the same DCs using pathogen-mimicking microparticles (PMPs), significantly enhances their Th1/Th2 cytokine ratio through concurrent inhibition of CpG-induced IL10 production. Co-delivery of poly(I:C), a TLR3 agonist had only minor effects on IL10 levels. Further, simultaneous immunotherapy with CpG ODN and IL10 siRNA enhanced immune protection of an idiotype DNA vaccine in a prophylactic murine model of B cell lymphoma whereas co-delivery of poly(I:C) and CpG did not enhance protection. These results suggest that PMPs can be used to precisely modulate TLR ligand-mediated immune-stimulation in DCs, through co-delivery of cytokine-silencing siRNAs and thereby boost antitumor immunity.
Scientific Reports | 2017
Ranjna Madan-Lala; Pallab Pradhan; Krishnendu Roy
Despite decades of research very few vaccine-adjuvants have received FDA approval. Two fundamental challenges plague clinical translation of vaccine-adjuvants: reducing acute toxicities that result from systemic diffusion of many soluble adjuvants, and delivering multiple adjuvants at the same time to mimic the synergistic immune-stimulation of pathogens, while being safe. In order to address these barriers, we evaluated combinations of four clinically relevant immune-agonists, specifically Toll-like receptor (TLR) ligands, using biodegradable, polymer microparticles. We tested them alone and in combinations of 2 or 3, for a total of 10 unique conditions. We evaluated primary bone-marrow-derived Dendritic Cell phenotypes and functionality, and identified several synergistic combinations. We picked a dual and a triple adjuvant combination, TLR4/TLR9 and TLR4/TLR7/TLR9, for further evaluation and found that both combinations promoted antigen cross-presentation in vitro. Studies in mice using the model antigen Ovalbumin, showed that both combinations enhanced lymph node germinal center and T follicular helper cell responses. The triple adjuvant combination showed increased antigen-specific antibody titer with an overall balanced Th1/Th2 response, while the dual combination promoted Th1-polarized IgG responses. Our results show how polymeric particulate-carriers can be adopted to safely deliver combinatorial adjuvants and selectively synergize specific types of immune responses for vaccine applications.
Angewandte Chemie | 2017
Chunlei Zhu; Pallab Pradhan; Da Huo; Jiajia Xue; Song Shen; Krishnendu Roy; Younan Xia
Low-density lipoproteins (LDLs) are a class of nanocarriers for the targeted delivery of therapeutics into aberrant cells that overexpress the LDL receptor. A facile procedure is used for reconstituting the hydrophobic core of LDLs with a binary fatty acid mixture. Facilitated by the tumor targeting capability of the apolipoprotein, the reconstituted, drug-loaded LDLs can effectively target cancer cells that overexpress the LDL receptor while showing minor adverse impact on normal fibroblasts. According to a hypothesized mechanism, the reconstituted LDLs can also enable metabolism-triggered drug release while preventing the payloads from lysosomal degradation. This study demonstrates that LDLs reconstructed with fatty acids hold great promise to serve as effective and versatile nanocarriers for targeted cancer therapy.
Lab on a Chip | 2017
Robert G. Mannino; Adriana Santiago-Miranda; Pallab Pradhan; Yongzhi Qiu; Joscelyn C. Mejias; Sattva S. Neelapu; Krishnendu Roy; Wilbur A. Lam
Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) is an aggressive cancer that affects ∼22 000 people in the United States yearly. Understanding the complex cellular interactions of the tumor microenvironment is critical to the success and development of DLBCL treatment strategies. In vitro platforms that successfully model the complex tumor microenvironment without introducing the variability of in vivo systems are vital for understanding these interactions. To date, no such in vitro model exists that can accurately recapitulate the interactions that occur between immune cells, cancer cells, and endothelial cells in the tumor microenvironment of DLBCL. To that end, we developed a lymphoma-on-chip model consisting of a hydrogel based tumor model traversed by a vascularized, perfusable, round microchannel that successfully recapitulates key complexities and interactions of the in vivo tumor microenvironment in vitro. We have shown that the perfusion capabilities of this technique allow us to study targeted treatment strategies, as well as to model the diffusion of infused reagents spatiotemporally. Furthermore, this model employs a novel fabrication technique that utilizes common laboratory materials, and allows for the microfabrication of multiplex microvascular environments without the need for advanced microfabrication facilities. Through our facile microfabrication process, we are able to achieve micro vessels within a tumor model that are highly reliable and precise over the length of the vessel. Overall, we have developed a tool that enables researchers from many diverse disciplines to study previously inaccessible aspects of the DLBCL tumor microenvironment, with profound implications for drug delivery and design.
Archive | 2018
Robert G. Mannino; Pallab Pradhan; Krishnendu Roy; Wilbur A. Lam
Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) is a particularly aggressive cancer, impacting the lives of approximately 20,000 people annually in the United States. Elucidating cellular interactions that occur within the microenvironment of DLBCL tumors is crucial to the successful development of therapeutic strategies for this condition. As the in vivo microenvironment of DLBCL is quite complex and variable, in vitro platforms that can sufficiently recapitulate these multifaceted cellular interactions without introducing the complexities of in vivo systems are vital for understanding the pathophysiology of this disease. In this chapter, we present a method for fabrication and development of an in vitro DLBCL-on-chip model in which a fully vascularized, perfusable, microfluidic traverses a DLBCL tumor cell-laden hydrogel that successfully recapitulates hallmark attributes and cellular interaction that occur within the DLBCL tumor microenvironment. As this microfluidic approach makes use of common laboratory items and does not require traditional photolithography to fabricate, this system represents a vital tool that can unlock previously inaccessible research areas of the DLBCL tumor microenvironment to researchers across numerous fields.
bioRxiv | 2017
Kyung-Ho Roh; Hannah K Wilson; Pallab Pradhan; Kevin Bai; Caitlin Bohannon; Gordon Dale; Jardin A Leleux; Joshy Jacob; Krishnendu Roy
B cells play a major role in the adaptive immune response by producing antigen-specific antibodies against pathogens and imparting immunological memory. Following infection or vaccination, antibody-secreting B cells and memory B cells are generated in specialized regions of lymph nodes and spleens, called germinal centers. Here, we report a fully synthetic ex-vivo system that recapitulates the generation of antigen-specific germinal-center (GC) like B cells using material-surface driven polyvalent signaling. This synthetic germinal center (sGC) reaction was effectively induced using biomaterial-based artificial “follicular T helper cells (TFH)” that provided both natural CD40-CD40L ligation as well as crosslinking of CD40; and by mimicking artificial “follicular dendritic cells (FDC)” to provide efficient, polyvalent antigen presentation. The artificial sGC reaction resulted in efficient B cell expansion, immunoglobulin (Ig) class switching, and expression of germinal center phenotypes. Antigen presentation during sGC reaction selectively enhanced the antigen-specific B cell population and induced somatic hyper-mutations for potential affinity maturation. The resulting B cell population consisted primarily of GC-like B cells (centrocytes) as well as some plasma-like B cells expressing CD138. With concurrent cell sorting, we successfully created highly enriched populations of antigen-specific B cells. Adoptive transfer of these GC-like B cells into non-irradiated isogeneic or non-lethally irradiated congenic recipient mice showed successful engraftment and survival of the donor cells for the 4 week test period. We show that this material-surface driven sGC reaction can be successfully applied to not only splenic B cells but also B cells isolated from more therapeutically relevant sources such as peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs), thus making our current work an exciting prospect in the new era of personalized medicine and custom-immunotherapy.
JCI insight | 2017
Pallab Pradhan; Jardin Leleux; Jiaying Liu; Krishnendu Roy
Despite initial remission after successful treatments, B lymphoma patients often encounter relapses and resistance causing high mortality. Thus, there is a need to develop therapies that prevent relapse by providing long-term protection and, ultimately, lead to functional cure. In this study, our goal was to develop a simple, clinically relevant, and easily translatable therapeutic vaccine that provides durable immune protection against aggressive B cell lymphoma and identify critical immune biomarkers that are predictive of long-term survival. In a delayed-treatment, aggressive, murine model of A20 B lymphoma that mimics human diffuse large B cell lymphoma, we show that therapeutic A20 lysate vaccine adjuvanted with an NKT cell agonist, α-galactosylceramide (α-GalCer), provides long-term immune protection against lethal tumor challenges and the antitumor immunity is primarily CD8 T cell dependent. Using experimental and computational methods, we demonstrate that the initial strength of germinal center reaction and the magnitude of class-switching into a Th1 type humoral response are the best predictors for the long-term immunity of B lymphoma lysate vaccine. Our results not only provide fundamentally insights for successful immunotherapy and long-term protection against B lymphomas, but also present a simple, therapeutic vaccine that can be translated easily due to the facile and inexpensive method of preparation.
Archive | 2013
Ankur Singh; Pallab Pradhan; Krishnendu Roy
Vaccines have been one of the most important discoveries of modern medicine. They are the primary mode of protection against a wide range of infectious diseases and, if effective, can provide long-lasting immunity. Despite recent advances in our understanding of the immune system, prophylactic vaccines against chronic infectious diseases and immunotherapeutic vaccines against cancer remain elusive. Unlike preventive vaccines that have virtually eradicated fatal diseases like polio and smallpox, immunotherapy of chronic diseases and established or unexpected infections, for example human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), has yet to demonstrate global clinical success. Even for diseases where preventive vaccines are available, for example influenza, the protection is transient and requires multiple administration and yearly immunizations. In addition, most cancers and emerging infectious diseases, like the H1N1 influenza, and drug resistance infections like tuberculosis, need new transformative strategies to increase protective immunity many folds over currently available vaccines. Successful immunotherapy using vaccines requires effective strategies to penetrate tissue barriers, efficiently target antigens, adjuvants and immune-modulators to immune surveillance cells, provide strong stimulatory effects to activate those cells, and modulate the cellular response appropriately and efficiently in order to generate potent antiviral or anticancer immunity. The emerging field of immunobioengineering provides new concepts and strategies to design materials, antigens, and adjuvants to induce potent immune response; and engineer vaccine delivery systems to modulate the behavior of immune cells [1]. In this chapter we review the state-of-the-art approaches in immunobioengineering with specific focus on delivery formulations for multiple immune-modulators and antigens.
Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2011
Dipak Maity; Prashant Chandrasekharan; Pallab Pradhan; Kai-Hsiang Chuang; Junmin Xue; Si-Shen Feng; Jun Ding
Cell Reports | 2017
Jardin Leleux; Pallab Pradhan; Krishnendu Roy