@article{MaulanaKromidasWallstabeetal.2021, author = {Maulana, Tengku Ibrahim and Kromidas, Elena and Wallstabe, Lars and Cipriano, Madalena and Alb, Miriam and Zaupa, C{\´e}cile and Hudecek, Michael and Fogal, Birgit and Loskill, Peter}, title = {Immunocompetent cancer-on-chip models to assess immuno-oncology therapy}, series = {Advanced Drug Delivery Reviews}, volume = {173}, journal = {Advanced Drug Delivery Reviews}, doi = {10.1016/j.addr.2021.03.015}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-370493}, pages = {281-305}, year = {2021}, abstract = {The advances in cancer immunotherapy come with several obstacles, limiting its widespread use and benefits so far only to a small subset of patients. One of the underlying challenges remains to be the lack of representative nonclinical models that translate to human immunity and are able to predict clinical efficacy and safety outcomes. In recent years, immunocompetent Cancer-on-Chip models emerge as an alternative human-based platform that enables the integration and manipulation of complex tumor microenvironment. In this review, we discuss novel opportunities offered by Cancer-on-Chip models to advance (mechanistic) immuno-oncology research, ranging from design flexibility to multimodal analysis approaches. We then exemplify their (potential) applications for the research and development of adoptive cell therapy, immune checkpoint therapy, cytokine therapy, oncolytic virus, and cancer vaccines.}, language = {en} } @article{AlbSieAdametal.2012, author = {Alb, Miriam and Sie, Christopher and Adam, Christian and Chen, Suzie and Becker, J{\"u}rgen C. and Schrama, David}, title = {Cellular and cytokine-dependent immunosuppressive mechanisms of grm1-transgenic murine melanoma}, series = {Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy}, volume = {61}, journal = {Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy}, number = {12}, doi = {10.1007/s00262-012-1290-9}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-125096}, pages = {2239-2249}, year = {2012}, abstract = {Grm1-transgenic mice spontaneously develop cutaneous melanoma. This model allowed us to scrutinize the generic immune responses over the course of melanoma development. To this end, lymphocytes obtained from spleens, unrelated lymph nodes and tumor-draining lymph nodes of mice with no evidence of disease, and low or high tumor burden were analyzed ex vivo and in vitro. Thereby, we could demonstrate an increase in the number of activated CD4\(^+\) and CD8+ lymphocytes in the respective organs with increasing tumor burden. However, mainly CD4\(^+\) T cells, which could constitute both T helper as well as immunosuppressive regulatory T cells, but not CD8\(^+\) T cells, expressed activation markers upon in vitro stimulation when obtained from tumor-bearing mice. Interestingly, these cells from tumor-burdened animals were also functionally hampered in their proliferative response even when subjected to strong in vitro stimulation. Further analyses revealed that the increased frequency of regulatory T cells in tumor-bearing mice is an early event present in all lymphoid organs. Additionally, expression of the immunosuppressive cytokines TGF-β1 and IL-10 became more evident with increased tumor burden. Notably, TGF-β1 is strongly expressed in both the tumor and the tumor-draining lymph node, whereas IL-10 expression is more pronounced in the lymph node, suggesting a more complex regulation of IL-10. Thus, similar to the situation in melanoma patients, both cytokines as well as cellular immune escape mechanisms seem to contribute to the observed immunosuppressed state of tumor-bearing grm1-transgenic mice, suggesting that this model is suitable for preclinical testing of immunomodulatory therapeutics.}, language = {en} }