| Literature DB >> 31523868 |
Ravi B Patel1, Mingzhou Ye2, Peter M Carlson1, Abigail Jaquish1, Luke Zangl1, Ben Ma2, Yuyuan Wang2, Ian Arthur1, Ruosen Xie2, Ryan J Brown1, Xing Wang3, Raghava Sriramaneni1, KyungMann Kim3, Shaoqin Gong2, Zachary S Morris1.
Abstract
Neoantigens induced by random mutations and specific to an individual's cancer are the most important tumor antigens recognized by T cells. Among immunologically "cold" tumors, limited recognition of tumor neoantigens results in the absence of a de novo antitumor immune response. These "cold" tumors present a clinical challenge as they are poorly responsive to most immunotherapies, including immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs). Radiation therapy (RT) can enhance immune recognition of "cold" tumors, resulting in a more diversified antitumor T-cell response, yet RT alone rarely results in a systemic antitumor immune response. Therefore, a multifunctional bacterial membrane-coated nanoparticle (BNP) composed of an immune activating PC7A/CpG polyplex core coated with bacterial membrane and imide groups to enhance antigen retrieval is developed. This BNP can capture cancer neoantigens following RT, enhance their uptake in dendritic cells (DCs), and facilitate their cross presentation to stimulate an antitumor T-cell response. In mice bearing syngeneic melanoma or neuroblastoma, treatment with BNP+RT results in activation of DCs and effector T cells, marked tumor regression, and tumor-specific antitumor immune memory. This BNP facilitates in situ immune recognition of a radiated tumor, enabling a novel personalized approach to cancer immunotherapy using off-the-shelf therapeutics.Entities:
Keywords: cancer immunotherapy; nanoparticles; radiation; vaccines
Year: 2019 PMID: 31523868 PMCID: PMC6810793 DOI: 10.1002/adma.201902626
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Mater ISSN: 0935-9648 Impact factor: 30.849