| Literature DB >> 32160474 |
Saborni Chattopadhyay1,2, Yu-Han Liu2, Zih-Syun Fang2, Chi-Long Lin2, Jung-Chen Lin2, Bing-Yu Yao2, Che-Ming Jack Hu1,2,3.
Abstract
Many favorable anticancer treatments owe their success to the induction immunogenic cell death (ICD) in cancer cells, which results in the release of endogenous danger signals along with tumor antigens for effective priming of anticancer immunity. We describe a strategy to artificially induce ICD by delivering the agonist of stimulator of interferon genes (STING) into tumor cells using hollow polymeric nanoshells. Following intracellular delivery of exogenous adjuvant, subsequent cytotoxic treatment creates immunogenic cellular debris that spatiotemporally coordinate tumor antigens and STING agonist in a process herein termed synthetic immunogenic cell death (sICD). sICD is indiscriminate to the type of chemotherapeutics and enables colocalization of exogenously administered immunologic adjuvants and tumor antigens for enhanced antigen presentation and anticancer adaptive response. In three mouse tumor models, sICD enhances therapeutic efficacy and restrains tumor progression. The study highlights the benefit of delivering STING agonists to cancer cells, paving ways to new chemo-immunotherapeutic designs.Entities:
Keywords: STING agonist; chemo-immunotherapy; immunogenic cell death; in situ vaccination; polymeric nanoshell
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32160474 DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.9b04094
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189