Investigator

Bryan Q. Spring

Associate Professor · Northeastern University, Physics

BQSBryan Q. Spring
Papers(2)
Identification of pot…Fractionated photoimm…
Collaborators(4)
Heiko EnderlingMohammad U. ZahidSudip TimilsinaTayyaba Hasan
Institutions(5)
Northeastern State Un…The University of Tex…The University of Tex…Northeastern Universi…Massachusetts Institu…

Papers

Identification of potential cell surface targets in patient‐derived cultures toward photoimmunotherapy of high‐grade serous ovarian cancer

AbstractTumor‐targeted, activatable photoimmunotherapy (taPIT) has shown promise in preclinical models to selectively eliminate drug‐resistant micrometastases that evade standard treatments. Moreover, taPIT has the potential to resensitize chemo‐resistant tumor cells to chemotherapy, making it a complementary modality for treating recurrent high‐grade serous ovarian cancer (HGSOC). However, the established implementation of taPIT relies on the overexpression of EGFR in tumor cells, which is not universally observed in HGSOCs. Motivated by the need to expand taPIT applications beyond EGFR, we conducted mRNA‐sequencing and proteomics to identify alternative cell surface targets for taPIT in patient‐derived HGSOC cell cultures with weak EGFR expression and lacking expression of other cell surface proteins commonly reported in the literature as overexpressed in ovarian cancers, such as FOLR1 and EpCAM. Our findings highlight TFRC and LRP1 as promising alternative targets. Notably, TFRC was overexpressed in 100% (N = 5) of the patient‐derived HGSOC models tested, whereas only 60% of models had high EpCAM expression, suggesting that future larger cohort studies should include TFRC. While this study focuses on target identification, future work will expand the approaches developed here to larger HGSOC biopsy repositories and will also develop and evaluate antibody‐photosensitizer conjugates targeting these proteins for taPIT applications.

Fractionated photoimmunotherapy stimulates an anti-tumour immune response: an integrated mathematical and in vitro study

Abstract Background Advanced epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) has high recurrence rates due to disseminated initial disease presentation. Cytotoxic phototherapies, such as photodynamic therapy (PDT) and photoimmunotherapy (PIT, cell-targeted PDT), have the potential to treat disseminated malignancies due to safe intraperitoneal delivery. Methods We use in vitro measurements of EOC tumour cell and T cell responses to chemotherapy, PDT, and epidermal growth factor receptor targeted PIT as inputs to a mathematical model of non-linear tumour and immune effector cell interaction. The model outputs were used to calculate how photoimmunotherapy could be utilised for tumour control. Results In vitro measurements of PIT dose responses revealed that although low light doses (<10 J/cm2) lead to limited tumour cell killing they also increased proliferation of anti-tumour immune effector cells. Model simulations demonstrated that breaking up a larger light dose into multiple lower dose fractions (vis-à-vis fractionated radiotherapy) could be utilised to effect tumour control via stimulation of an anti-tumour immune response. Conclusions There is promise for applying fractionated PIT in the setting of EOC. However, recommending specific fractionated PIT dosimetry and timing will require appropriate model calibration on tumour-immune interaction data in human patients and subsequent validation of model predictions in prospective clinical trials.

11Works
2Papers
4Collaborators

Positions

2015–

Associate Professor

Northeastern University · Physics