| Literature DB >> 31947622 |
Idoia Mikelez-Alonso1,2, Antonio Aires1, Aitziber L Cortajarena1,3.
Abstract
Immunotherapy has become a promising cancer therapy, improving the prognosis of patients with many different types of cancer and offering the possibility for long-term cancer remission. Nevertheless, some patients do not respond to these treatments and immunotherapy has shown some limitations, such as immune system resistance or limited bioavailability of the drug. Therefore, new strategies that include the use of nanoparticles (NPs) are emerging to enhance the efficacy of immunotherapies. NPs present very different pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic properties compared with free drugs and enable the use of lower doses of immune-stimulating molecules, minimizing their side effects. However, NPs face issues concerning stability in physiological conditions, protein corona (PC) formation, and accumulation in the target tissue. PC formation changes the physicochemical and biological properties of the NPs and in consequence their therapeutic effect. This review summarizes the recent advances in the study of the effects of PC formation in NP-based immunotherapy. PC formation has complex effects on immunotherapy since it can diminish ("immune blinding") or enhance the immune response in an uncontrolled manner ("immune reactivity"). Here, future perspectives of the field including the latest advances towards the use of personalized protein corona in cancer immunotherapy are also discussed.Entities:
Keywords: cancer immunotherapy; checkpoint inhibitors; immune blinding; immune reactivity; immune response; nanomedicine; nanoparticles; personalized medicine; personalized protein corona; protein corona
Year: 2020 PMID: 31947622 PMCID: PMC7014289 DOI: 10.3390/ijms21020519
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Classification of immunotherapy strategies. Active (pale brown on the left) vs. passive immunotherapy (dark brown on the right). The three main immunotherapy strategies used in cancer treatment are shown in the figure separately: (1) Antigen and stimulating molecule delivery (orange); (2) Adoptive transfer therapy (blue); and (3) Therapeutics to the tumor microenvironment (TME) (green). Figure adapted from [20,27]. NP: nanoparticle; NK: natural killer; DC: dendritic cell.
Recently studied nanoformulations for immunotherapy. Some nano-formulations are approved by Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and others are in clinical trials [28].
| Compound Name | Formulation Description | Chemotherapy | Immunotherapy Type | Route of Immunization | Clinical Trials | Approved by the FDA | Ref. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Immunotherapy | Ferumoxytol | IONP | No | Active | TME→ M2-like macrophages to M1-like | Yes, for anemia and kidney diseases | [ | |
| eCPMV | VLP of cowpea mosaic virus | No | Active | Neutrophil activation in the TME | - | - | [ | |
| RNA-LPX (Lipoplex®) | RNA-loaded liposomes | No | Active | DC maturation, Tcell response, inflammatory response | Phase I (2016) | [ | ||
| PTX-LDE | Paclitaxel-loaded lipid core NPs | Yes | Active | DC maturation [ | Phase II (2017) | [ | ||
| MRX34 | miRNA-34a-loaded liposome | No | Passive | Downregulation of immune evasion tumor genes | Phase I (2016) | [ | ||
| nab-Paclitaxel (Abraxane®) | Paclitaxel-loaded albumin NPs | Yes | Not applied right now | DC maturation | Phase III (2017) | Yes, for cancer treatment | [ | |
| aCD47@CaCO3 | Anti CD47-loaded CaCO3 NP in fibrinogen solution | No | Active | After surgery, and with the addition of thrombin, aCD47@CaCO3 forms a immunotherapeutic gel in situ in the TME | - | - | [ | |
| Sipuleucel-T | ex vivo DCs | No | Active | Vaccine | Yes, for prostate cancer | [ | ||
| Blinatumomab | Bi-specific T cell engager (BiTE). Specific to CD19 and CD3. | No | Passive | BiTE targeting CD19 (malignant B cell) and CD3 (T cell) and cytotoxicity effect against B cells. | Yes, for Philadelphia negative Acute lymphocytic leukaemia (ALL) | [ | ||
| Talimogene Laherparepvec (T-VEC) | Injectable modified herpes virus | No | Active | Vaccine | Yes, for advanced melanoma | [ | ||
| No immunotherapy | BIND-014 | Docetaxel-loaded Poly-Lactic Acid (PLA) NP and Prostate-Specific Membrane Antigen (PSMA) in the surface | Yes | No | - | Phase II(2018) | No | [ |
| SPIO | Super paramagnetic iron oxide NPs | No. Only for imaging | - | - | Yes for imaging | [ | ||
| Doxil® | Dox-loaded liposome | Yes | No | - | - | Yes | [ | |
| Marqibo | Vincristine-loaded liposome | Yes | No | - | - | Yes, for Ph negative ALL | [ | |
| Ontak® | Protein NPs | Yes | No | - | - | Yes, for cutaneous T cell lymphoma | [ | |
Figure 2Nanoparticle-based immunotherapy failure because of protein corona (PC) formation. No-response (left) vs. excessive or uncontrolled response (right). Top left panel: Immune cells are not able to recognize the molecules on the surface of the NPs because the PC covers the NPs partially or totally. Bottom left: NP phagocytosis by macrophages because of the denaturalization of the proteins (in green) on the surface of the NPs. Top right: Aggregation of NPs triggers toxic effects by strange-body recognition by immune system. Bottom right: Nuclear Factor κB (NF-κB) translocation to the nucleus because of the recognition of denatured proteins on the surface of the NPs.
Figure 3(a) Protein denaturalization on the surface of NPs. Secondary structure of the fibrinogen protein measured by circular dichroism after being incubated with different concentrations of 5-nm poly(acrylic acid)-coated gold nanoparticles (PAA–GNPs).Figure from [94]. (b) Effect of protein corona formation and composition on early apoptosis and cell death responses in THP-1 cells, a human Leukemic monocytes cell line. Poly (metacrylic acid) hollow particles (PMA CAPs) (in green) and PMA cores-shell particles (PMA CSPs) (in blue) were exposed to various environments (different media, serum free control, fetal bovine serum (FBS), human serum (HS), human plasma (HP), and culture media with three different cell lines HeLa, LoVo, and THP-1) to acquire a hard protein corona (hPC). The early apoptosis (YO-PRO-1 staining) and cell death (PI staining) were measured by flow cytometry. Data are shown as the mean ± standard error of at least four independent experiments, with at least 10,000 cells analyzed in each experiment. * p< 0.05, ** p< 0.01, *** p< 0.001, versus the column of “Blank” (indicating untreated cells) (one-way ANOVA Dunnett’s multiple comparison test). Figure from [95].
Figure 4The protein corona in cancer immunotherapy. Schematic description of an NP–PPC based therapy mechanism in which radiotherapy induces the release of tumor-derived protein antigens (TDPAs) that are integrated in the PC and promote the antigen presentation and the anti-cancer immune activation. This approach is applied in combination with checkpoint inhibitor therapy. Figure from [117]. PPC: personalized protein corona. AC-NPs refers to Antigen Capture-Nano Particles.