| Literature DB >> 28901740 |
Xinhe Yu1, Duo Gao1, Liquan Gao1, Jianhao Lai1, Chenran Zhang1, Yang Zhao1, Lijun Zhong2, Bing Jia1,2, Fan Wang1,3, Xiaoyuan Chen4, Zhaofei Liu1.
Abstract
Effective cancer therapy depends not only on destroying the primary tumor but also on conditioning the host immune system to recognize and eliminate residual tumor cells and prevent metastasis. In this study, a tumor integrin αvβ6-targeting peptide (the HK peptide)-functionalized graphene oxide (GO) was coated with a photosensitizer (HPPH). The resulting GO conjugate, GO(HPPH)-PEG-HK, was investigated whether it could destroy primary tumors and boost host antitumor immunity. We found that GO(HPPH)-PEG-HK exhibited significantly higher tumor uptake than GO(HPPH)-PEG and HPPH. Photodynamic therapy (PDT) using GO(HPPH)-PEG suppressed tumor growth in both subcutaneous and lung metastatic mouse models. Necrotic tumor cells caused by GO(HPPH)-PEG-HK PDT activated dendritic cells and significantly prevented tumor growth and lung metastasis by increasing the infiltration of cytotoxic CD8+ T lymphocytes within tumors as evidenced by in vivo optical and single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT)/CT imaging. These results demonstrate that tumor-targeted PDT using GO(HPPH)-PEG-HK could effectively ablate primary tumors and destroy residual tumor cells, thereby preventing distant metastasis by activating host antitumor immunity and suppressing tumor relapse by stimulation of immunological memory.Entities:
Keywords: graphene oxide; immunological memory; immunotherapy; photodynamic therapy; tumor vaccine
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28901740 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.7b04736
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881