| Literature DB >> 28629381 |
Michele Graciotti1, Cristiana Berti2, Harm-Anton Klok2, Lana Kandalaft3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Immunotherapy consists of activating the patient's immune system to fight cancer and has the great potential of preventing future relapses thanks to immunological memory. A great variety of strategies have emerged to harness the immune system against tumors, from the administration of immunomodulatory agents that activate immune cells, to therapeutic vaccines or infusion of previously activated cancer-specific T cells. However, despite great recent progress many difficulties still remain, which prevent the widespread use of immunotherapy. Some of these limitations include: systemic toxicity, weak immune cellular responses or persistence over time and most ultimately costly and time-consuming procedures. MAIN BODY: Synthetic and natural biomaterials hold great potential to address these hurdles providing biocompatible systems capable of targeted local delivery, co-delivery, and controlled and/or sustained release. In this review we discuss some of the bioengineered solutions and approaches developed so far and how biomaterials can be further implemented to help and shape the future of cancer immunotherapy.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28629381 PMCID: PMC5477313 DOI: 10.1186/s12967-017-1244-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Transl Med ISSN: 1479-5876 Impact factor: 5.531
Fig. 1The cancer immunity cycle. Diagram illustrating the seven major steps involved in the generation of an immune response against cancer with main bioengineering approaches developed so far (in red). aAPCs artificial antigen presenting cells, APCs antigen presenting cells, NPs nanoparticles. Adapted from [171]
Fig. 2Nanoparticle classification and main characteristics. γ-PGA poly(γ-glutamic acid), HA hyaluronic acid, PLGA poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid)
List of recent studies investigating nanoparticle-mediated delivery of immunomodulatory agents
| Carrier | Agent | Model system | Outcomea | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| mPEG-PLGA | Oxaliplatin | Pan02 pancreatic cancer mouse model | Increased TIL levels, increased IFN-γ production | [ |
| Chitosan | IL-12 | MB49 bladder tumor mouse model | Induced antitumoral activity and TH1 cytokine expression | [ |
| Chitosan | IL-12 | MB49 and MBT-2 bladder tumor mouse models | 100% protection to tumor rechallenge in previously cured mice | [ |
| Liposome | Cisplatin CpG | B16–F10 melanoma mouse model | Tumor clearance, long-term protection, Treg downregulation | [ |
| Nanodiamond | CpG | B16–F0 melanoma and 4T1 breast cancer mouse models | IL-12 production and tumor shrinkage | [ |
| PEI | IL-2 plasmid | B16–F1 melanoma mouse model | Reduced tumor growth, prolonged survival, increased TIL tumor infiltration | [ |
| Chitosan | IL-2 plasmid | BALB/c mouse inoculated with WEHI-164 in vitro transfected cells | Tumor mass volume decrease | [ |
| Hydroxyethyl starch | IL-2 | C57BL/6 mouse model; Rag2−/−γc−/− mice reconstituted with human CD4+ T cells | In vivo T cell specific uptake | [ |
| Nanolipogel | IL-2 and TGF-β inhibitor | B16-F10 melanoma mouse model | Increased survival | [ |
| Polylactic acid | IL-12, IL-18, TNF-α alone or in combinations | 4T1 breast cancer mouse models | IL-12 and TNF-α combination was the best condition for controlling tumor growth | [ |
| PLGA-PEI | CpG, IL-10 siRNA | A20 B-cell lymphoma mouse model | Improved TH1/TH2 cytokine expression ratio, Increased survival | [ |
| HA | Paclitaxel | B16–F10 melanoma mouse model | Tumor growth inhibition | [ |
| PPS | CpG | E.G7-OVA and B16F10 mouse model | Enhanced TH1 cytokine secretion and protection to tumor rechallenge | [ |
| silica | GM-CSF | In vitro | Increased macrophage proliferation | [ |
| Zinc oxide | Poly I:C | B16–F10 mouse melanoma model | suppressed tumor cell growth | [ |
| PS | Poly I:C | C57BL/6 mouse model | High IL6 production; | [ |
| PLGA | Paclitaxel LPS | B16–F10 mouse melanoma model | Increased TIL levels and tumor regression | [ |
| Pyridyl disulfide | Paclitaxel or CpG | B16–F10 mouse melanoma model | Slowed tumor growth, increased CD8+/CD4+ T cell ratio | [ |
| Albumin | Paclitaxel | Phase I studies | Combination with IL-2, IFN-α, cisplatin and temozolomide was too toxic; combination with atezolizumab was well tolerated | [ |
| Liposome | DOX | Phase I study | Combination with IL-18 is safe and biologically active | [ |
| PEG-liposome | DOX | Phase I study | Functional IL-6R blocking with tocilizumab is feasible and safe in combination with PEG-liposomal DOX | [ |
DOX doxorubicin, HA hyaluronic acid, LPS bacterial lipopolysaccharide, PEG polyethylene glycol, PEI polyethylenimine, PLGA poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid), PPS poly(propylene sulphide), PS polysaccharide, TIL tumor infiltrating lymphocytes
aCompared to free soluble agent, when applicable
List of recent studies investigating nanoparticle-mediated delivery of tumor antigen(s) either alone or in combination with adjuvant(s)/DC-targeting moieties for cancer therapeutic vaccination
| Carrier | Loaded with | Study type | Outcomea | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Liposome | Hsp70 peptide complex | Breast cancer mouse model | Enhanced immune response | [ |
| Liposome | MUC1 peptide, TLR4 ligand | Phase I–II–III studies | Phase I studies: vaccine was well tolerated; phase II study in NSCLC: survival improvement; Phase III study in NSCLC: only improvement observed was in concurrent chemoradiotherapy with a 10.2 month improvement in median survival | [ |
| Liposome | HLA-B7 and β2-microglobulin DNA | Phase II-III studies | Phase II study in metastatic melanoma had a positive outcome, but phase III study failed and product is currently discontinued | [ |
| Liposome | NY-ESO-1, MAGE-A3, tyrosinase and TPTE RNA | Phase I study | Positive outcome in all 3 patients tested. Recruitment of more patients is currently undergoing | [ |
| Liposome | Mix of different peptides | Phase I study | Phase I trial positive outcome, with induced de novo and specific T cell response | [ |
| Liposome | SOCS1, A20 siRNA | Mouse lymphoma model | Drastic enhancement in cytokine production resulting in significant tumor suppression | [ |
| Liposome | E7 HPV | TC-1 lung mouse model | Induced specific CD8+T cell response and Treg inhibition | [ |
| Liposome | OVA, TLR3/9 ligands | C57BL/6 mouse model | Increased CD8+ T cell response | [ |
| γ-PGA/Polylysine | Empty or ovalbumin | C57BL/6 mouse model | Comparative study: PGA has intrinsic immunogenic properties and induced a stronger immune response than polylysine when both loaded with ovalbumin | [ |
| γ-PGA | Ovalbumin | C57BL/6 mouse model | γ-PGA immunogenic properties are TLR4 signalling-dependent | [ |
| Cationic polymers (PE/C32) | CD40 ligand DNA, CpG + poly(I:C) | B16-F10 melanoma mouse model | Comparative study: C32 polimer was superior to PE. TLR ligands had a synergistic effect in triggering immune response | [ |
| PLGA | WTL | In vitro | Co-culture of patient TILs with patient DCs pulsed with autologous WTL-NPs resulted in higher IFN-γ and lower IL-10 production compared to soluble WTL | [ |
| PLGA | WTL, CpG, polyI:C | TRAMP mouse model | Induced CTL response and tumor shrinkage | [ |
| PLGA | WTL | In vitro | Increased T cell proliferation | [ |
| PLGA | Ovalbumin TLR3/7 ligands; CD40, CD11c, or DEC-205 ab | C57BL/6 mouse model | NP coating with targeting molecules (CD40, CD11c or DEC-205 antibodies) induced a stronger immune response | [ |
| PLGA | Ovalbumin, mannose | C57BL/6 mouse model | Decoration of ovalbumin-NPs with mannose moieties increased the efficiency of ovalbumin-specific CD4+ and CD8+ T cell responses | [ |
| PLGA | TRP2180–188; TLR-4 ligand | B16-F10 melanoma mouse model | Immune stimulation in the tumor microenvironment, induction of antigen-specific CD8+ response | [ |
| PLGA | Hgp10025–33 TRP2180–188 | C57BL/6 mouse model | Increased antigen-specific T cell response | [ |
| Cholesteryl pullulan | HER2 fragment; NY-ESO-1 protein | Phase I studies | Vaccine was well tolerated and induced antigen-specific immune responses | [ |
| Chitosan | Ovalbumin, alginate | In vitro | Sugar-coated NP induced higher IFN-γ production in co-culture assays | [ |
| Chitosan | WTL, mannose | B16 melanoma mouse model | Increased tumor growth inhibition | [ |
| BSA/pyridine | Ovalbumin | In vitro | This type of nanogel had intrinsic adjuvant properties | [ |
| Nanogel | Ovalbumin, galactose | B16-OVA mouse model | (pH-sensitive system) cytosolic antigen release; ROS production and increased MHC-I antigen presentation | [ |
γ-PGA poly(γ-glutamic acid), BSA bovine serum albumin, NP nanoparticle, NSCLC non-small-cell carcinoma, PLGA poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid), TLR toll-like receptor, TRAMP transgenic adenocarcinoma of the mouse prostate, WTL whole tumor lysate
aCompared to free soluble agent, when applicable