Antibody (Ab) Dynamics and Organ-Chip Approaches to Test Mechanisms of Protective Antibodies (Abs)

Georgia Tomaras and Nathanial Chapman of Duke University and Girija Goyal and Don Ingber of the Wyss Institute at Harvard University, both in the U.S., will test whether Organ-on-a-Chip technology can inform how antibodies protect humans from pathogen infections to design more effective vaccines. Identifying protective vaccine features and validating them in human clinical trials is time-consuming and costly. An alternative is to use primary human organ chips that reproduce human physiology in vitro. They will stimulate peripheral blood mononuclear cells on the human lymph-node-on-a-chip with existing COVID vaccines and extensively characterize the resultant antibodies, including evaluating epitope specificity, and isotype and glycan profiling. They will also assess the capacity of these antibodies to prevent or reduce SARS-CoV-2 infection using the lung-on-a-chip technology. This approach can ultimately be applied to other pathogens, such as those causing malaria.

Grant ID
INV-060822
Show on Hub
On
Show on Spoke
On
Follow-on Funding
Off
Lead Funding Organization
Initiatives
Principal Investigator
Individual Funder Information
Funding Organization
Funding Amount (in original currency)
200000.00
Funding Currency
USD
Funding Amount (in USD)
200000.00
Funding Date Range
-
Funding Total (In US dollars)
200000.00
Co-Funded
False