We can hack our immune cells to fight cancer | Elizabeth Wayne

84,736 views ・ 2017-11-07

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

Translator: Reviewer: Daban Q. Jaff
00:12
After decades of research
0
12873
2033
00:14
and billions of dollars spent in clinical trials,
1
14930
3269
00:18
we still have a problem with cancer drug delivery.
2
18223
3178
00:22
We still give patients chemotherapy,
3
22586
2144
00:24
which is so non-specific
4
24754
1833
00:26
that even though it kills the cancer cells,
5
26611
2526
00:29
it kind of kills the rest of your body, too.
6
29161
2285
00:32
And yes, we have developed more selective drugs,
7
32494
3456
00:35
but it's still a challenge to get them into the tumor,
8
35974
2703
00:38
and they end up accumulating in the other organs as well
9
38701
2916
00:41
or passing through your urine,
10
41641
1631
00:43
which is a total waste.
11
43296
1781
00:46
And fields like mine have emerged
12
46389
1970
00:48
where we try to encapsulate these drugs
13
48383
1966
00:50
to protect them as they travel through the body.
14
50373
2553
00:52
But these modifications cause problems
15
52950
2853
00:55
that we make more modifications to fix.
16
55827
2425
00:58
So what I'm really trying to say is we need a better drug delivery system.
17
58961
4528
01:03
And I propose,
18
63513
1416
01:04
rather than using solely human design,
19
64953
2631
01:07
why not use nature's?
20
67608
1635
01:10
Immune cells are these versatile vehicles that travel throughout our body,
21
70309
3854
01:14
patrolling for signs of disease
22
74187
2102
01:16
and arriving at a wound mere minutes after injury.
23
76313
3144
01:20
So I ask you guys:
24
80000
1419
01:22
If immune cells are already traveling to places of injury or disease
25
82054
3381
01:25
in our bodies,
26
85459
1153
01:26
why not add an extra passenger?
27
86636
1657
01:28
Why not use immune cells to deliver drugs
28
88966
2927
01:31
to cure some of our biggest problems
29
91917
1962
01:33
in disease?
30
93903
1398
01:36
I am a biomedical engineer,
31
96446
1909
01:38
and I want to tell you guys a story about how I use immune cells
32
98379
3001
01:41
to target one of the largest problems in cancer.
33
101404
3235
01:44
Did you know that over 90 percent of cancer deaths
34
104663
2507
01:47
can be attributed to its spread?
35
107194
1751
01:48
So if we can stop these cancer cells
36
108969
2265
01:51
from going from the primary tumor to a distant site,
37
111258
3074
01:54
we can stop cancer right in its tracks
38
114356
2476
01:56
and give people more of their lives back.
39
116856
2183
02:00
To do this special mission,
40
120182
1580
02:01
we decided to deliver a nanoparticle made of lipids,
41
121786
3050
02:04
which are the same materials that compose your cell membrane.
42
124860
3233
02:08
And we've added two special molecules.
43
128733
2344
02:11
One is called e-selectin,
44
131952
2177
02:14
which acts as a glue
45
134153
1276
02:15
that binds the nanoparticle to the immune cell.
46
135453
3331
02:19
And the second one is called trail.
47
139223
2493
02:21
Trail is a therapeutic drug that kills cancer cells
48
141740
2656
02:24
but not normal cells.
49
144420
1245
02:26
Now, when you put both of these together,
50
146392
2802
02:29
you have a mean killing machine on wheels.
51
149218
2865
02:35
To test this, we ran an experiment in a mouse.
52
155589
2573
02:39
So what we did was we injected the nanoparticles,
53
159276
3065
02:42
and they bound almost immediately to the immune cells in the bloodstream.
54
162365
4017
02:46
And then we injected the cancer cells to mimic a process
55
166406
2925
02:49
through which cancer cells spread throughout our bodies.
56
169355
3151
02:52
And we found something very exciting.
57
172530
2132
02:55
We found that in our treated group,
58
175620
2670
02:58
over 75 percent of the cancer cells we initially injected were dead or dying,
59
178314
4780
03:03
in comparison to only around 25 percent.
60
183118
2697
03:05
So just imagine: these fewer amount of cells were available
61
185839
3182
03:09
to actually be able to spread to a different part of the body.
62
189045
3112
03:12
And this is only after two hours of treatment.
63
192181
2717
03:14
Our results were amazing, and we had some pretty interesting press.
64
194922
4306
03:19
My favorite title was actually,
65
199974
2250
03:22
"Sticky balls may stop the spread of cancer."
66
202248
2614
03:24
(Laughter)
67
204886
1093
03:26
I can't tell you just how smug my male colleagues were,
68
206003
4008
03:30
knowing that their sticky balls might one day cure cancer.
69
210035
2973
03:33
(Laughter)
70
213032
2298
03:35
But I can tell you they made some pretty, pretty, exciting,
71
215354
3402
03:38
pretty ballsy t-shirts.
72
218780
1298
03:40
This was also my first experience talking to patients
73
220595
4216
03:44
where they asked how soon our therapy would be available.
74
224835
2893
03:48
And I keep these stories with me to remind me of the importance
75
228279
3145
03:51
of the science, the scientists and the patients.
76
231448
2947
03:55
Now, our fast-acting results were pretty interesting,
77
235809
2541
03:58
but we still had one lingering question:
78
238374
2133
04:00
Can our sticky balls,
79
240531
1696
04:02
our particles actually attached to the immune cells,
80
242251
2683
04:04
actually stop the spread of cancer?
81
244958
1941
04:07
So we went to our animal model, and we found three important parts.
82
247624
4276
04:12
Our primary tumors were smaller in our treated animals,
83
252615
3018
04:15
there were fewer cells in circulation,
84
255657
2518
04:18
and there was little to no tumor burden in the distant organs.
85
258199
3466
04:22
Now, this wasn't just a victory for us and our sticky balls.
86
262835
3878
04:26
This was also a victory to me
87
266737
2107
04:28
in drug delivery,
88
268868
1255
04:30
and it represents a paradigm shift,
89
270147
1931
04:32
a revolution --
90
272102
1246
04:34
to go from just using drugs, just injecting them
91
274330
3380
04:37
and hoping they go to the right places in the body,
92
277734
2453
04:40
to using immune cells as special delivery drivers in your body.
93
280211
4991
04:45
For this example, we used two molecules, e-selectin and trail,
94
285975
3716
04:49
but really, the possibility of drugs you can use are endless.
95
289715
3784
04:53
And I talked about cancer,
96
293523
2394
04:55
but where disease goes, so do immune cells.
97
295941
2662
04:59
So this could be used for any disease.
98
299600
2415
05:02
Imagine using immune cells to deliver crucial wound-healing agents
99
302039
4679
05:06
after a spinal cord injury,
100
306742
1842
05:09
or using immune cells to deliver drugs past the blood-brain barrier
101
309474
4397
05:13
to treat Parkinson's or Alzheimer's disease.
102
313895
2361
05:17
These are the ideas that excite me about science the most.
103
317044
3049
05:20
And from where I stand, I see so much promise and opportunity.
104
320710
3447
05:24
Thank you.
105
324181
1190
05:25
(Applause)
106
325395
3541
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7