| Literature DB >> 32255624 |
Lewis Y Liu1,2, Xue-Zhong Ma1, Ben Ouyang3, Danielle P Ings4, Sagar Marwah1, Jeff Liu5, Annie Y Chen4, Rahul Gupta1, Justin Manuel1, Xu-Chun Chen1, Blair K Gage1,6, Iulia Cirlan7, Nicholas Khuu7, Sai Chung1,2, Damra Camat1,2, Michael Cheng1,8, Manmeet Sekhon1, Kyryl Zagorovsky3,8, Mohamed A Abdou Mohamed8,9, Cornelia Thoeni1, Jawairia Atif1,2, Juan Echeverri1, Dagmar Kollmann1, Sandra Fischer1,10, Gary D Bader5, Warren C W Chan3,11, Tomasz I Michalak4, Ian D McGilvray1, Sonya A MacParland1,2,10.
Abstract
There is a tremendous focus on the application of nanomaterials for the treatment of cancer. Nonprimate models are conventionally used to assess the biomedical utility of nanomaterials. However, these animals often lack an intact immunological background, and the tumors in these animals do not develop spontaneously. We introduce a preclinical woodchuck hepatitis virus-induced liver cancer model as a platform for nanoparticle (NP)-based in vivo experiments. Liver cancer development in these out-bred animals occurs as a result of persistent viral infection, mimicking human hepatitis B virus-induced HCC development. We highlight how this model addresses key gaps associated with other commonly used tumor models. We employed this model to (1) track organ biodistribution of gold NPs after intravenous administration, (2) examine their subcellular localization in the liver, (3) determine clearance kinetics, and (4) characterize the identity of hepatic macrophages that take up NPs using RNA-sequencing (RNA-seq). We found that the liver and spleen were the primary sites of NP accumulation. Subcellular analyses revealed accumulation of NPs in the lysosomes of CD14+ cells. Through RNA-seq, we uncovered that immunosuppressive macrophages within the woodchuck liver are the major cell type that take up injected NPs. The woodchuck-HCC model has the potential to be an invaluable tool to examine NP-based immune modifiers that promote host anti-tumor immunity.Entities:
Keywords: biodistribution; gold nanoparticles; hepatocellular carcinoma; marmota monax; tumor microenvironment; woodchuck hepatitis virus
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32255624 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.0c00468
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881