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review article

Evidence and therapeutic implications of biomechanically regulated immunosurveillance in cancer and other diseases

Mittelheisser, Vincent
•
Gensbittel, Valentin
•
Bonati, Lucia  
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January 29, 2024
Nature Nanotechnology

Disease progression is usually accompanied by changes in the biochemical composition of cells and tissues and their biophysical properties. For instance, hallmarks of cancer include the stiffening of tissues caused by extracellular matrix remodelling and the softening of individual cancer cells. In this context, accumulating evidence has shown that immune cells sense and respond to mechanical signals from the environment. However, the mechanisms regulating these mechanical aspects of immune surveillance remain partially understood. The growing appreciation for the 'mechano-immunology' field has urged researchers to investigate how immune cells sense and respond to mechanical cues in various disease settings, paving the way for the development of novel engineering strategies that aim at mechanically modulating and potentiating immune cells for enhanced immunotherapies. Recent pioneer developments in this direction have laid the foundations for leveraging 'mechanical immunoengineering' strategies to treat various diseases. This Review first outlines the mechanical changes occurring during pathological progression in several diseases, including cancer, fibrosis and infection. We next highlight the mechanosensitive nature of immune cells and how mechanical forces govern the immune responses in different diseases. Finally, we discuss how targeting the biomechanical features of the disease milieu and immune cells is a promising strategy for manipulating therapeutic outcomes.|This Review highlights the current understanding of mechanisms underlying the mechanical changes occurring in diseased and immune cells and discusses new approaches to leverage and target biomechanical cues for immune engineering at various length scales for therapeutic interventions.

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Type
review article
DOI
10.1038/s41565-023-01535-8
Web of Science ID

WOS:001152056400002

Author(s)
Mittelheisser, Vincent
Gensbittel, Valentin
Bonati, Lucia  
Li, Weilin  
Tang, Li  
Goetz, Jacky G.
Date Issued

2024-01-29

Publisher

Nature Portfolio

Published in
Nature Nanotechnology
Subjects

Technology

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T-Cell-Activation

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Natural-Killer-Cells

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Fluid Shear-Stress

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Fibroblast Activation

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Dendritic Cells

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Stromal Cells

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In-Vivo

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Mechanical-Properties

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Spatial-Organization

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Gene-Expression

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LBI  
FunderGrant Number

Swiss National Science Foundation

315230_204202

European Research Council

805337

Swiss Cancer Research Foundation

KFS-4600-08-2018

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Available on Infoscience
February 23, 2024
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/205409
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