Four Ounces Can Move a Thousand Pounds: The Enormous Value of Nanomaterials in Tumor Immunotherapy

Author:

Chen Ziyin1,Yue Ziqi2,Yang Kaiqi3,Shen Congrong1,Cheng Zhe2,Zhou Xiaofeng1,Li Shenglong45ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Urology China‐Japan Friendship Hospital 100029 Beijing P. R. China

2. Department of Forensic Medicine Harbin Medical University 150001 Harbin P. R. China

3. Clinical Medicine Harbin Medical University 150001 Harbin P. R. China

4. Second Ward of Bone and Soft Tissue Tumor Surgery Cancer Hospital of Dalian University of Technology Cancer Hospital of China Medical University Liaoning Cancer Hospital and Institute 110042 Shenyang P. R. China

5. The Liaoning Provincial Key Laboratory of Interdisciplinary Research on Gastrointestinal Tumor Combining Medicine with Engineering Shenyang 110042 China

Abstract

AbstractThe application of nanomaterials in healthcare has emerged as a promising strategy due to their unique structural diversity, surface properties, and compositional diversity. In particular, nanomaterials have found a significant role in improving drug delivery and inhibiting the growth and metastasis of tumor cells. Moreover, recent studies have highlighted their potential in modulating the tumor microenvironment (TME) and enhancing the activity of immune cells to improve tumor therapy efficacy. Various types of nanomaterials are currently utilized as drug carriers, immunosuppressants, immune activators, immunoassay reagents, and more for tumor immunotherapy. Necessarily, nanomaterials used for tumor immunotherapy can be grouped into two categories: organic and inorganic nanomaterials. Though both have shown the ability to achieve the purpose of tumor immunotherapy, their composition and structural properties result in differences in their mechanisms and modes of action. Organic nanomaterials can be further divided into organic polymers, cell membranes, nanoemulsion‐modified, and hydrogel forms. At the same time, inorganic nanomaterials can be broadly classified as nonmetallic and metallic nanomaterials. The current work aims to explore the mechanisms of action of these different types of nanomaterials and their prospects for promoting tumor immunotherapy.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Pharmaceutical Science,Biomedical Engineering,Biomaterials

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