600964 Self-Assembled Cgamp-Stingδtm Signaling Complex As a Bioinspired Platform for Cgamp Delivery

Tuesday, November 17, 2020
Food, Pharmaceutical & Bioengineering Division (15) (Poster Gallery)
Yanpu He1, Celestine Hong1, Emily Yan1, Samantha Fletcher1, Ge Zhu2, Mengdi Yang2, Yingzhong Li3, Xin Sun2, Jiahe Li4, Darrell Irvine5 and Paula T. Hammond6, (1)Department of Chemical Engineering, MIT, Cambridge, MA, (2)Biological Engineering, Northeastern University, (3)Department of Biological Engineering, MIT, Cambridge, MA, (4)Biological Engineering, Northeastern University, Cambridge, MA, (5)MIT, Cambridge, MA, (6)Department of Chemical Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA

The stimulator of interferon (IFN) genes (STING) pathway constitutes a highly important part of immune responses against various cancers and infections. Consequently, administration of STING agonists such as cyclic GMP-AMP (cGAMP) has been identified as a promising approach to target these diseases. In cancer cells, STING signaling is frequently impaired by epigenetic silencing of STING; hence, conventional delivery of only its agonist cGAMP may be insufficient to trigger STING signaling. In this work, while expression of STING lacking the transmembrane (TM) domain is known to be unresponsive to STING agonists and is dominant negative when coexpressed with the full-length STING inside cells, we observed that the recombinant TM-deficient STING protein complexed with cGAMP could effectively trigger STING signaling when delivered in vitro and in vivo, including in STING-deficient cell lines. Thus, this bio-inspired method using TM-deficient STING may present a new and universally applicable platform for cGAMP delivery.

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See more of this Session: Poster Session: Bioengineering
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