Ectopic Lymphoid Follicle Formation and Human Seasonal Influenza Vaccination Responses Recapitulated in an Organ‐on‐a‐Chip

Girija Goyal(Harvard University), Pranav Prabhala(Harvard University), Gautam Mahajan(Harvard University), Bruce Bausk(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Tal Gilboa(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Liangxia Xie(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Yunhao Zhai(Harvard University), Roey Lazarovits(Harvard University), Adam Mansour(Harvard University), Min Sun Kim(Harvard University), Aditya Patil(Harvard University), Danielle Curran(Harvard University), Jaclyn M. Long(Harvard University), Sanjay Sharma(Harvard University), Abidemi Junaid(Harvard University), Limor Cohen(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Thomas C. Ferrante(Harvard University), Oren Levy(Harvard University), Rachelle Prantil‐Baun(Harvard University), David R. Walt(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Donald E. Ingber(Boston Children's Hospital)
Advanced Science
March 14, 2022
Cited by 113Open Access
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Abstract

Lymphoid follicles (LFs) are responsible for generation of adaptive immune responses in secondary lymphoid organs and form ectopically during chronic inflammation. A human model of ectopic LF formation will provide a tool to understand LF development and an alternative to non-human primates for preclinical evaluation of vaccines. Here, it is shown that primary human blood B- and T-lymphocytes autonomously assemble into ectopic LFs when cultured in a 3D extracellular matrix gel within one channel of a two-channel organ-on-a-chip microfluidic device. Superfusion via a parallel channel separated by a microporous membrane is required for LF formation and prevents lymphocyte autoactivation. These germinal center-like LFs contain B cells expressing Activation-Induced Cytidine Deaminase and exhibit plasma cell differentiation upon activation. To explore their utility for seasonal vaccine testing, autologous monocyte-derived dendritic cells are integrated into LF Chips. The human LF chips demonstrate improved antibody responses to split virion influenza vaccination compared to 2D cultures, which are enhanced by a squalene-in-water emulsion adjuvant, and this is accompanied by increases in LF size and number. When inoculated with commercial influenza vaccine, plasma cell formation and production of anti-hemagglutinin IgG are observed, as well as secretion of cytokines similar to vaccinated humans over clinically relevant timescales.


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