| Literature DB >> 33011679 |
Xingshu Li1, Yun-Hui Jeon2, Nahyun Kwon3, Jun-Gyu Park2, Tian Guo3, Hang-Rae Kim2, Jian-Dong Huang4, Dong-Sup Lee5, Juyoung Yoon6.
Abstract
Immunogenic photodynamic therapy (PDT) has the potential to moderate the shortfalls of cancer immunotherapy. However, its efficacy is severely limited particularly because of the lack of optimal photosensitizers and smart delivery processes and the inherent shortcomings of PDT (e.g., hypoxia resistance). Here, we demonstrate a clinically promising approach that utilizes a water-soluble phthalocyanine derivative (PcN4) concomitantly delivered with a hypoxia-activated prodrug (AQ4N) to amplify the effect of PDT and enhance cancer immunotherapy. After intravenous injection, PcN4 selectively interacted with endogenous albumin dimers and formed supramolecular complexes, providing a facile and green approach for tumor-targeted PDT. The concomitant delivery of AQ4N overcame the limitations of hypoxia in PDT and improved the antitumor activity of PDT. Treatment with PcN4-mediated and AQ4N-amplified PDT almost completely eradicated sizable primary tumors in a triple-negative breast cancer model and significantly activated CD8+ T cells. As the majority of tumor infiltrating CD8+ T cells were both PD-1- and TIM3-positive, additional combination therapy using PD-L1/PD-1 pathway blockade was warranted. After combination with immune checkpoint blockade treatment, an enhanced abscopal effect was achieved in both distant and metastatic tumors.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer immunotherapy; Hypoxia-activated prodrug; Photodynamic therapy; Phthalocyanine; Supramolecular self-assembly
Year: 2020 PMID: 33011679 DOI: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2020.120430
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomaterials ISSN: 0142-9612 Impact factor: 12.479