2023 AIChE Annual Meeting
(519c) Graduate Student Award Session: Anchoring Interleukin-12 Onto Cell-Membrane Targeted Nanoparticles Enhances Metastatic Ovarian Cancer Immunotherapy
Materials and Methods: In this work, the stability of linker chemistry used to conjugate interleukin-12 (IL-12) onto LbL liposomes coated with a bilayer poly-L-arginine (PLR) and poly-L-glutamate (PLE) was assessed for its effect on intraperitoneally disseminated metastatic ovarian cancer models. IL-12 conjugation was performed either via the interaction of nickel with a histidine tag on IL-12 or the reaction of maleimide with a terminal cysteine in IL-12. Particle size, charge and morphology was characterized via dynamic light scattering, laser doppler electrophoresis, and transmission electron microscopy, respectively. IL-12 concentration and total lipid content were assessed through enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and the colorimetric Stewart Assay, respectively. For efficacy studies, mice were inoculated intraperitoneally with a highly metastatic syngeneic ovarian cancer cell line (OV-2944-HM-1) and treated either daily for five days with 10 ug/day of IL12 or with a single 50 ug dose of IL12. Anti-tumor immune cells were quantified on blood and splenocytes of surviving mice via interferon-γ enzyme-linked immune absorbent spot (ELISpot) against the tumor cells.
Results: The linker chemistry had indistinguishable effect on size, zeta potential, and particle morphology. While a single intraperitoneal dose of IL-12 increased median survival of dextrose treated mice from 17 days to 27 days, a single dose of maleimide-conjugated IL-12-LbL-NPs was extended median survival of mice to 67 days compared to 36 days of nickel-conjugated LbL-NPs. When dosed daily for five days, 100% of mice dosed with maleimide-conjugated LbL-NPs were cured compared to 80% for nickel-conjugated IL-12-LbL-NPs and 40% for free IL-12. Analysis of tumor-specific immune response via ELISpot revealed a significantly elevated anti-tumor response in maleimide-linked IL-12-LbL NPs compared to free IL-12 or unlayered IL-12-NPs. Moreover, when dosed weekly for two weeks, only maleimide-linked LbL-NPs demonstrated enhanced survival over the free IL-12 protein. This effect was found to synergize with immune checkpoints inhibitors enabling 100% cures of metastatic ovarian cancer in a mouse model.
Conclusion: Taken together, these results demonstrated that stable conjugation of IL-12 onto LbL-NPs enhances cancer immunotherapy of metastatic ovarian cancer and that LbL-mediated targeting of ovarian cancer cells promoted anti-tumor immunity.