淋巴瘤
巨噬细胞
癌症研究
医学
免疫学
生物
体外
生物化学
作者
Laura C. Bahlmann,Chang Xue,Allysia A. Chin,Arianna Skirzynska,Joy Lu,Brigitte L. Thériault,David T. Uehling,Yulia Yerofeyeva,Rachel L. Peters,Kela Liu,Jianan Chen,Anne L. Martel,Martin J. Yaffe,Rima Al‐awar,Rashmi S. Goswami,Jarkko Ylanko,David W. Andrews,John Kuruvilla,Rob C. Laister,Molly S. Shoichet
出处
期刊:Biomaterials
[Elsevier BV]
日期:2023-04-09
卷期号:297: 122121-122121
被引量:7
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.biomaterials.2023.122121
摘要
Tumour-associated macrophages are linked with poor prognosis and resistance to therapy in Hodgkin lymphoma; however, there are no suitable preclinical models to identify macrophage-targeting therapeutics. We used primary human tumours to guide the development of a mimetic cryogel, wherein Hodgkin (but not Non-Hodgkin) lymphoma cells promoted primary human macrophage invasion. In an invasion inhibitor screen, we identified five drug hits that significantly reduced tumour-associated macrophage invasion: marimastat, batimastat, AS1517499, ruxolitinib, and PD-169316. Importantly, ruxolitinib has demonstrated recent success in Hodgkin lymphoma clinical trials. Both ruxolitinib and PD-169316 (a p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (p38 MAPK) inhibitor) decreased the percent of M2-like macrophages; however, only PD-169316 enhanced the percentage of M1-like macrophages. We validated p38 MAPK as an anti-invasion drug target with five additional drugs using a high-content imaging platform. With our biomimetic cryogel, we modeled macrophage invasion in Hodgkin lymphoma and then used it for target discovery and drug screening, ultimately identifying potential future therapeutics.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI