Autologous patient-derived exhausted nano T-cells exploit tumor immune evasion to engage an effective cancer therapy
-
Published:2024-05-09
Issue:1
Volume:23
Page:
-
ISSN:1476-4598
-
Container-title:Molecular Cancer
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Mol Cancer
Author:
Blaya-Cánovas José L.,Griñán-Lisón Carmen,Blancas Isabel,Marchal Juan A.,Ramírez-Tortosa César,López-Tejada Araceli,Benabdellah Karim,Cortijo-Gutiérrez Marina,Cano-Cortés M. Victoria,Graván Pablo,Navarro-Marchal Saúl A.,Gómez-Morales Jaime,Delgado-Almenta Violeta,Calahorra Jesús,Agudo-Lera María,Sagarzazu Amaia,Rodríguez-González Carlos J.,Gallart-Aragón Tania,Eich Christina,Sánchez-Martín Rosario M.,Granados-Principal Sergio
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Active targeting by surface-modified nanoplatforms enables a more precise and elevated accumulation of nanoparticles within the tumor, thereby enhancing drug delivery and efficacy for a successful cancer treatment. However, surface functionalization involves complex procedures that increase costs and timelines, presenting challenges for clinical implementation. Biomimetic nanoparticles (BNPs) have emerged as unique drug delivery platforms that overcome the limitations of actively targeted nanoparticles. Nevertheless, BNPs coated with unmodified cells show reduced functionalities such as specific tumor targeting, decreasing the therapeutic efficacy. Those challenges can be overcome by engineering non-patient-derived cells for BNP coating, but these are complex and cost-effective approaches that hinder their wider clinical application. Here we present an immune-driven strategy to improve nanotherapeutic delivery to tumors. Our unique perspective harnesses T-cell exhaustion and tumor immune evasion to develop a groundbreaking new class of BNPs crafted from exhausted T-cells (NExT) of triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) patients by specific culture methods without sophisticated engineering.
Methods
NExT were generated by coating PLGA (poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid)) nanoparticles with TNBC-derived T-cells exhausted in vitro by acute activation. Physicochemical characterization of NExT was made by dynamic light scattering, electrophoretic light scattering and transmission electron microscopy, and preservation and orientation of immune checkpoint receptors by flow cytometry. The efficacy of chemotherapy-loaded NExT was assessed in TNBC cell lines in vitro. In vivo toxicity was made in CD1 mice. Biodistribution and therapeutic activity of NExT were determined in cell-line- and autologous patient-derived xenografts in immunodeficient mice.
Results
We report a cost-effective approach with a good performance that provides NExT naturally endowed with immune checkpoint receptors (PD1, LAG3, TIM3), augmenting specific tumor targeting by engaging cognate ligands, enhancing the therapeutic efficacy of chemotherapy, and disrupting the PD1/PDL1 axis in an immunotherapy-like way. Autologous patient-derived NExT revealed exceptional intratumor accumulation, heightened chemotherapeutic index and efficiency, and targeted the tumor stroma in a PDL1+ patient-derived xenograft model of triple-negative breast cancer.
Conclusions
These advantages underline the potential of autologous patient-derived NExT to revolutionize tailored adoptive cancer nanotherapy and chemoimmunotherapy, which endorses their widespread clinical application of autologous patient-derived NExT.
Funder
Fundación Científica Asociación Española Contra el Cáncer Consejería de Economía, Innovación, Ciencia y Empleo, Junta de Andalucía Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades Consejería de Transformación Económica, Industria, Conocimiento y Universidades Instituto de Salud Carlos III Consejería de Economía, Conocimiento, Empresas y Universidad, Junta de Andalucía, Spain
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference76 articles.
1. Shi J, Kantoff PW, Wooster R, Farokhzad OC. Cancer nanomedicine: progress, challenges and opportunities. Nat Rev Cancer. 2017;17:20–37. 2. Sau S, Petrovici A, Alsaab HO, Bhise K, Iyer AK. PDL-1 antibody drug conjugate for selective chemo-guided Immune Modulation of Cancer. Cancers (Basel). 2019;11:232. 3. Rosenblum D, Joshi N, Tao W, Karp JM, Peer D. Progress and challenges towards targeted delivery of cancer therapeutics. Nat Commun. 2018;9:1410. 4. Hu C-MJ, Zhang L, Aryal S, Cheung C, Fang RH, Zhang L. Erythrocyte membrane-camouflaged polymeric nanoparticles as a biomimetic delivery platform. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2011;108:10980–5. 5. Cao H, Dan Z, He X, Zhang Z, Yu H, Yin Q, et al. Liposomes coated with isolated macrophage membrane can target lung metastasis of breast Cancer. ACS Nano. 2016;10:7738–48.
Cited by
2 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|