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Browsing by Author "Shamul, James G."
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Item Creating a capture zone in microfluidic flow greatly enhances the throughput and efficiency of cancer detection(Elsevier, 2019-03) Sun, Mingrui; Xu, Jiangsheng; Shamul, James G.; Lu, Xiongbin; Husain, Syed; He, Xiaoming; Medical and Molecular Genetics, School of MedicineEfficient capture of rare circulating tumor cells (CTCs) from blood samples is valuable for early cancer detection to improve the management of cancer. In this work, we developed a highly efficient microfluidics-based method for detecting CTCs in human blood. This is achieved by creating separate capture and flow zones in the microfluidic device (ZonesChip) and using patterned dielectrophoretic force to direct cells from the flow zone into the capture zone. This separation of the capture and flow zones minimizes the negative impact of high flow speed (and thus high throughput) and force in the flow zone on the capture efficiency, overcoming a major bottleneck of contemporary microfluidic approaches using overlapping flow and capture zones for CTC detection. When the flow speed is high (≥0.58 mm/s) in the flow zone, the separation of capture and flow zones in our ZonesChip could improve the capture efficiency from ∼0% (for conventional device without separating the two zones) to ∼100%. Our ZonesChip shows great promise as an effective platform for the detection of CTCs in blood from patients with early/localized-stage colorectal tumors.Item In-situ cryo-immune engineering of tumor microenvironment with cold-responsive nanotechnology for cancer immunotherapy(Springer Nature, 2023-01-24) Ou, Wenquan; Stewart, Samantha; White, Alisa; Kwizera, Elyahb A.; Xu, Jiangsheng; Fang, Yuanzhang; Shamul, James G.; Xie, Changqing; Nurudeen, Suliat; Tirada, Nikki P.; Lu, Xiongbin; Tkaczuk, Katherine H. R.; He, Xiaoming; Medical and Molecular Genetics, School of MedicineCancer immunotherapy that deploys the host’s immune system to recognize and attack tumors, is a promising strategy for cancer treatment. However, its efficacy is greatly restricted by the immunosuppressive (i.e., immunologically cold) tumor microenvironment (TME). Here, we report an in-situ cryo-immune engineering (ICIE) strategy for turning the TME from immunologically “cold” into “hot”. In particular, after the ICIE treatment, the ratio of the CD8+ cytotoxic T cells to the immunosuppressive regulatory T cells is increased by more than 100 times in not only the primary tumors with cryosurgery but also distant tumors without freezing. This is achieved by combining cryosurgery that causes “frostbite” of tumor with cold-responsive nanoparticles that not only target tumor but also rapidly release both anticancer drug and PD-L1 silencing siRNA specifically into the cytosol upon cryosurgery. This ICIE treatment leads to potent immunogenic cell death, which promotes maturation of dendritic cells and activation of CD8+ cytotoxic T cells as well as memory T cells to kill not only primary but also distant/metastatic breast tumors in female mice (i.e., the abscopal effect). Collectively, ICIE may enable an efficient and durable way to leverage the immune system for combating cancer and its metastasis.