| Literature DB >> 33431631 |
Razan Alzeibak1, Tatiana A Mishchenko1, Natalia Y Shilyagina1, Irina V Balalaeva1, Maria V Vedunova1, Dmitri V Krysko2,3,4.
Abstract
The past decade has witnessed major breakthroughs in cancer immunotherapy. This development has been largely motivated by cancer cell evasion of immunological control and consequent tumor resistance to conventional therapies. Immunogenic cell death (ICD) is considered one of the most promising ways to achieve total tumor cell elimination. It activates the T-cell adaptive immune response and results in the formation of long-term immunological memory. ICD can be triggered by many anticancer treatment modalities, including photodynamic therapy (PDT). In this review, we first discuss the role of PDT based on several classes of photosensitizers, including porphyrins and non-porphyrins, and critically evaluate their potential role in ICD induction. We emphasize the emerging trend of ICD induction by PDT in combination with nanotechnology, which represents third-generation photosensitizers and involves targeted induction of ICD by PDT. However, PDT also has some limitations, including the reduced efficiency of ICD induction in the hypoxic tumor microenvironment. Therefore, we critically evaluate strategies for overcoming this limitation, which is essential for increasing PDT efficiency. In the final part, we suggest several areas for future research for personalized cancer immunotherapy, including strategies based on oxygen-boosted PDT and nanoparticles. In conclusion, the insights from the last several years increasingly support the idea that PDT is a powerful strategy for inducing ICD in experimental cancer therapy. However, most studies have focused on mouse models, but it is necessary to validate this strategy in clinical settings, which will be a challenging research area in the future. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2021. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: adaptive immunity; alarmins; cytotoxicity; immunogenicity; immunologic; immunotherapy; vaccine
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33431631 PMCID: PMC7802670 DOI: 10.1136/jitc-2020-001926
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunother Cancer ISSN: 2051-1426 Impact factor: 13.751
Figure 1Mechanisms of photodynamic reaction during photodynamic therapy (PDT). (1) Following the absorption of photons (hv), one of the electrons of the photosensitizer (PS) is boosted into a high-energy orbital (S1 or S2) and activated to the short-lived (nanoseconds) excited singlet state (1PS·). 1PS· can lose its energy by internal conversion into heat (2) or by emitting light (fluorescence) (3). Alternatively, 1PS· transforms into a relatively long-lived (microseconds) excited triplet state (3PS·) via an intersystem crossing process (4). 3PS· moves directly from a triplet to a singlet state (1PS) by emission of light (phosphorescence) (5) or undergoes two kinds of reactions with surrounding molecules. In the type I photochemical reaction (6), 3PS· reacts directly with a substrate (eg, polyunsaturated fatty acids in cell membrane lipids) and transfers an electron or a proton, forming organic radicals. These radicals may further react with cellular oxygen to produce reactive oxygen species (ROS), such as superoxide anion (O2–·), hydroperoxide radical (HOO·), peroxides (H2O2, ROOH) and hydroxyl radical (HO·), as well initiate free radical chain reactions. In the type II photochemical reaction (7), the triplet 3PS· can undergo triplet−triplet energy transfer to molecular oxygen (triplet in the ground state) to form excited-state singlet oxygen (1O2). Type I and type II photochemical reactions can be simultaneous, and the ratio between them depends mainly on the type of PS used, the concentrations of substrate and the availability of oxygen. As a result of the photodynamic reaction, various molecular mechanisms are activated, leading to different cell death modalities, recruitment and activation of immune cells and vascular damage.
Figure 2Photodynamic therapy (PDT)-induced immunogenic dell death at a glance. Photosensitizers (PSs) used in PDT have various chemical structures and can be divided into non-porphyrin and porphyrin (or tetrapyrrole) compounds. It has been experimentally proven that after accumulation in tumor cells and excitation by light of appropriate wavelength (hv), some PSs in each group of PSs can induce immunogenic cell death (ICD) (1). ICD refers to an immunological feature of cell death and is observed in immunogenic apoptosis and immunogenic necroptosis, as well as in mixed cell death types (2). The role of PDT in the induction of ferroptosis 132 133 in cancer cells needs to be further clarified 134. Importantly, only a fraction of cancer cells can be reached by light during PDT because light can penetrate only to a limited depth. ICD stimulates innate and adaptive immune responses, resulting in long-term immunological memory. Of note, the immunogenicity of ICD is mediated by the antigenicity (3) and adjuvanticity (4) of dying/dead cancer cells. The antigenicity of tumor cells is determined by the presence of tumor-associated antigens and tumor neoantigens (3). However, tumor-associated antigens usually fail to drive efficient immunity in the absence of additional adjuvants required to recruit and activate antigen-presenting cells. It is currently not known how PDT in combination with the above-mentioned PSs can modulate the antigenicity of dying cancer cells. The adjuvanticity of ICD resides in the release of damage-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs) such ATP, HMGB1 and HSP and CRT exposure on the outer cell surface (4). The emitted DAMPs promote the recruitment and maturation of antigen-presenting cells (eg, DCs) (5, 6), which leads to optimal antigen presentation to CD8+ T cells (7) and induction of antitumor immunity (8), resulting in significant suppression of tumor growth and/or regression of cancer and decreased risk of metastasis. The activated anticancer immunity aims to eradicate cells deep within the primary tumor and, therefore, significantly enhance PDT efficiency. The ‘gold standard’ for determining the true immunogenicity of cell death requires the conduction of experimental studies in vivo (mouse prophylactic tumor vaccination model) (9). For this, immunocompetent mice are first vaccinated with PDT-treated cancer cells in one flank and 1 week later rechallenged with living cells of the same type in the other flank (10). Protection against tumor growth at the challenge site is interpreted as a sign of successful priming of the adaptive immune system (11). *Examples of PSs with presumed but not fully proven immunogenic properties (lack of DAMPs expression and/or lack of immunogenicity either in vitro or in vivo). CD, cluster of differentiation; CRT, calreticulin; DC, dendritic cell; HMGB1, high-mobility group protein box 1; HSP, heat shock protein; hv, photons, IFN, interferon; IL, interleukin;.
ICD induction by non-porphyrin photosensitizers
| PS | Subcellular localization of PS | Cell line | Markers of cell death and cell death types | Mode of DAMPs release/exposure | Immunogenicity of cancer cells in vitro | Immunogenicity of cancer cells in vivo | References |
| Hypericin | ER | T24 human bladder carcinoma | N/D | Surface exposure of HSP70 and CRT; no surface exposure of HSP90 | N/D | N/D |
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| T24 human bladder carcinoma | Apoptosis (PtdSer exposure) | Surface exposure of CRT; | Phenotypic maturation of DCs (CD80high, CD83high, CD86high, MHC IIhigh) and functional stimulation (NOhigh, IL-10absent, IL-1βhigh) | N/D |
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| CT26 murine colon carcinoma | Apoptosis (WB: caspase-3 and PARP cleavage) | Surface exposure of CRT; release of ATP | N/D | Prophylactic vaccination model using hypericin-PDT-treated CT26 cells in immunocompetent BALB/c mice | |||
| GL261 murine glioma | Apoptosis (WB: caspase-3 cleavage) | Surface exposure of CRT, HSP70 and HSP90; release of HMGB1 and ATP | Phenotypic maturation of DCs (CD80high, CD86high, CD40high, MHC Ihigh) | Prophylactic PDT-based DC vaccination model in immunocompetent, syngeneic C57BL/6 mice: |
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| OR141 | ER | SCC7 murine head and neck carcinoma, A431 human epidermoid carcinoma | Necrosis and late apoptosis (WB: PARP cleavage, PtdSer exposure with a vital dye staining) | Surface exposure of CRT; release of HSP90, annexin A1, HMGB1 and ATP | Phenotypic maturation of DCs (CD80high, CD86high, MHC IIhigh) | Therapeutic vaccination model in C3H/HeNRj mice: |
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| Ab1, Ab12 murine mesothelioma | N/D | Surface exposure of CRT; release of HSP90 and HMGB1 | Phenotypic maturation of DCs (CD80high, CD86high, CD40high, MHC IIhigh) | Therapeutic PDT-based DC vaccination model in BALB/c mice (Ab1 cells): |
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| 8-Methoxypsoralen (8-MOP), extracorporeal photochemotherapy | N/D | YUMM1.7 murine melanoma, MC38 murine colon adenocarcinoma | Apoptosis (APO2-PE, trypan blue, and/or PtdSer and PI staining | N/D | Phenotypic maturation of DCs (CD80high, CD83high, CD86high, MHC IIhigh, HLA-DRhigh) | Therapeutic vaccination model using mixture of PBMCs incubated with PDT-treated tumor cells in tumor-bearing C57BL/6J mice. |
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| B16 murine melanoma expressing ovalbumin (B16-OVA), YUMMER murine melanoma, MC38 murine colon adenocarcinoma | Apoptosis (PtdSer exposure) | Surface exposure of CRT, release of ATP and HMGB1 (in B16-OVA cells) | Treated B16-OVA cells efficiently engulfed by monocytes to drive the cross-priming of tumor-specific CD8+ lymphocytes | Prophylactic vaccination model using 8-MOP-PDT-treated B16-OVA, YUMMER and MC38 cells in immunocompetent C57BL/6 mice |
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| Activated alloreactive T cells in vitro, peripheral blood mononuclear cells from GVHD patients | Apoptosis (PtdSer exposure) | Surface exposure of CRT, release of HMGB1. No release of ATP | Treated cells efficiently engulfed by macrophages and DC differentiated from monocytes. Absence of phenotypic maturation of DCs (CD80low, CD40low) and absence of IL-12, IL-6 and IFN-γ secretion by DCs. No ability to stimulate and polarize naive T cells by DCs | N/D |
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| Rose Bengal acetate | Cytoskeleton; mitochondria; | HeLa human cervical carcinoma | Apoptosis and autophagy (staining for PtdSer exposure and MDC) | Surface exposure of CRT, HSP70 and HSP90 on apoptotic cells; exposure of HSP70 and HSP90 on autophagic cells; release of HSP70, HSP90, ATP (only by apoptotic cells) and HMGB1 (by secondary necrotic cells) | N/D | N/D |
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ATP, adenosine triphosphate; CD, cluster of differentiation; CRT, calreticulin; DC, dendritic cell; ER, endoplasmic reticulum; GVHD, graft versus host disease; HLA, human leukocyte antigen; HMGB1, high-mobility group protein box 1; HSP, heat shock protein; ICAM-1, intercellular adhesion molecule 1; IFN, interferon; IL, interleukin; MDC, monodansylcadaverine; MHC, major histocompatibility complex; N/D, not detected; NK, natural killer; NO, nitric oxide; PARP, poly ADP ribose polymerase; PBMC, platelet-containing peripheral blood mononuclear cell; PDT, photodynamic therapy; PI, propidium iodide; PLAUR, urokinase plasminogen activator surface receptor; PS, photosensitizer; PtdSer, phosphatidylserine; TI, transimmunization; WB, western blot analysis.
ICD induction by porphyrin photosensitizers (PSs) of the first generation and second generation (tetrapyrrole PS)
| PS | Subcellular localization of PS | Cell line | Markers of cell death and cell death types | DAMPs expression | Immunogenicity of cancer cells in vitro | Immunogenicity of cancer cells in vivo | References |
| Photofrin | Mitochondria; cellular membranes | CT26 murine colon carcinoma | Apoptosis and necrosis (DNA fragmentation analysis by TUNEL in situ) | Surface exposure of HSP27, HSP34, | Stimulation of IL-12 production by DCs | Inoculation of DCs into PDT-treated CT26 tumors growing in BALB/c mice stimulated cytotoxic activity in lymph node and spleen. |
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| SCCVII murine squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) | Apoptosis (flow cytometry: caspase three active form) | Surface exposure of HSP70, HSP60, GRP94; release of HSP70; no surface exposure of GRP78 | HSP70 and GRP94 exposure on the macrophages surface, production of TNF-α and NF-κB | PDT-treated SCCVII tumors growing in C3H/HeN mice: surface exposure of HSP70 on leukocytes, and HSP60 and GRP94 on tumor-associated neutrophils and macrophages |
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| LLC murine lung carcinoma (Lewis lung carcinoma) | N/D | Surface exposure of CRT (in vitro and in vivo); | ↑ levels of intracellular HMGB1 in macrophages co-incubated with PDT-treated LLC cells | PDT-treated LLC tumors growing in syngeneic C57BL/6 mice: exposure of CRT on the surface of tumor-associated macrophages |
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| Protoporphyrin IX (PpIX) induced by exogenic 5-aminolevulinic acid | Mitochondria | GL261 murine glioma | Apoptosis (PtdSer exposure) | Surface exposure of HSP70; release of ATP | N/D | N/D |
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| U87 human glioblastoma, U251 human glioblastoma, astrocytoma | Apoptosis (DNA fragmentation analysis by TUNEL staining) | Surface exposure of HSP70 | Phenotypic maturation of DCs (CD40high, CD80high, CD83high, CD86high) | N/D |
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| PECA murine SCC | Apoptosis and necrosis (PtdSer exposure with a vital dye staining) | N/D | Phenotypic maturation of DCs (CD80high, CD86high, MHC IIhigh), production of IFN-γ and IL-12 | Prophylactic PDT-DC-based vaccination model in SKH-1 mice |
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| PECA murine SSC | Apoptosis (DNA fragmentation analysis by TUNEL staining) | Surface exposure of CRT and HSP70; release of HMGB1 and HSP70 in PECA cells (in vitro and in vivo) | Phenotypic maturation of DCs (CD80high, CD86high, MHC IIhigh), production of IFN-γ and IL-12 | Prophylactic vaccination model using ALA-PDT-treated SCC cells in SKH-1 mice |
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| PpIX induced by endogenic 5-methylaminolevulinic acid | ER | B16-OVA murine melanoma | Apoptosis (PtdSer exposure) | Surface exposure of CRT; enhanced expression of INF-1 | Phenotypic maturation of DCs (CD86high, MHC IIhigh) | N/D |
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| Meso-tetrahydroxyphenyl chlorin | ER | EMT6 murine mammary carcinoma | N/D | Surface exposure and release of HSP70 (in vitro and in vivo) | N/D | N/D |
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| SCCVII murine SCC | N/D | N/D | N/D | PDT-treated SCCVII tumors growing in C3H/HeN mice: rapid |
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| Glycoconjugated chlorin (G-chlorin) | Mitochondria | CT26 murine colon carcinoma | Apoptosis (flow cytometry: caspase three active form) | Surface exposure of CRT and release of HMGB1 (in vitro and in vivo) | N/D | Prophylactic vaccination model using G-chlorin-PDT-treated CT26 cells in BALB/c mice |
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| Photodithazine | ER and Golgi apparatus | GL261 murine glioma, MCA205 murine sarcoma | Apoptosis in GL261 (inhibitors analysis, PtdSer exposure with a vital dye staining) | Surface exposure of CRT; release of ATP and HMGB1 | Phenotypic maturation of DCs (CD40high, CD86high, MHC IIhigh), production of IL-6 | Prophylactic vaccination model using photodithazine-PDT-treated MCA205 cells in immunocompetent C57BL/6J mice |
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| Photosens | Lysosomes | GL261 murine glioma, MCA205 murine sarcoma | Apoptosis and ferroptosis in GL261 (inhibitors analysis, PtdSer exposure with a vital dye staining) | Surface exposure of CRT; release of ATP and HMGB1 | Phenotypic maturation of DCs (CD40high, CD86high, MHC IIhigh), production of IL-6 | Prophylactic vaccination model using Photosens-PDT-treated MCA205 cells in immunocompetent C57BL/6J mice |
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| 2-[1-Hexyloxyethyl]-2-devinyl pyropheophorbide (HPPH) | Mitochondria | Colon26-HA murine colorectal carcinoma, 4T1 murine mammary carcinoma | Apoptosis (caspase-3 activity and TUNEL assay | N/D | N/D | Tumor-bearing BALB/c mice that remained tumor free after the treatment were challenged with Colo26 or 4T1 cells. |
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| Sodium Porfimer (Photofrin) | |||||||
| Hydrophilic bacteriochlorin (F2BOH) | N/D | CT26 murine colorectal carcinoma | Apoptosis and necrosis (PtdSer exposure with a vital dye staining) | N/D | N/D | PDT-F2BOH cured CT26 tumor-bearing BALB/c mice rejected tumor re-inoculation 1 year after the treatment |
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CD, cluster of differentiation; CRT, calreticulin; DC, dendritic cell; ER, endoplasmic reticulum; GRP, glucose-regulated protein; HMGB1, high-mobility group protein box 1; HSP, heat shock protein; IFN, interferon; IL, interleukin; MHC, major histocompatibility complex; N/D, not detected; NF-κB, nuclear factor kappa-light-chain-enhancer of activated B; PDT, photodynamic therapy; PtdSer, phosphatidylserine; TNF, tumor necrosis factor; TUNEL, terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated nick end labeling analysis.
ICD induction by targeted and nanoparticle-incorporated photosensitizers (PS) of the third generation
| PS | Subcellular localization of PS | Cell line | Markers of cell death and cell death types | DAMPs expression | Immunogenicity of cancer cell in vitro | Immunogenicity of cancer cells in vivo | References |
| Cetuximab-IR700 | Bind to HER1-overexpressed on the plasma membrane of cancer cells | A431 human epidermoid carcinoma | N/D | Surface exposure of HSP70, HSP90 and CRT; release of ATP and HMGB1 | Phenotypic maturation of DCs (CD80high, CD86high, MHC IIhigh), production of IL-12 | NIR-PIT-treated A431cells growing in homozygotic athymic nude mice: |
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| Chlorin-based nanoscale metal-organic framework | N/D | CT26 murine colorectal carcinoma | Apoptosis and necrosis | Surface exposure of CRT | N/D | N/D |
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| MC38 murine colon adenocarcinoma | Apoptosis and necrosis | Surface exposure of CRT | N/D | PDT+IDO inhibitor-treated MC38 tumors growing in C57BL/6 mice: |
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| Core-shell nanoscale coordination polymer conjugated with pyropheophorbide lipid (NCP@pyrolipid) | N/D | CT26 murine colorectal carcinoma, MC38 murine colon adenocarcinoma | Apoptosis and necrosis | Surface exposure of CRT on CT26 cells | N/D | Prophylactic vaccination model using PDT-treated CT26 cells in BALB/c mice: |
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| Zn-pyrophosphate nanoparticles loaded with the PS pyrolipid (ZnP@pyro) | N/D | 4T1, TUBO murine mammary carcinoma | Apoptosis and/or necrosis | Surface exposure of CRT (in vitro and in vivo) | N/D | PDT-treated 4T1 tumors growing in orthotopic mice: |
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| Graphene oxide conjugated with the HK peptide, coated with a PS HPPH | N/D | 4T1 murine mammary carcinoma | Necrosis | N/D | Phenotypic maturation of DCs (CD80high, CD86 high) | PDT-treated 4T1 cells growing in BALB/c mice: |
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| Core-shell gold nanocage coated with manganese dioxide (AuNC@MnO2) | N/D | 4T1 murine mammary carcinoma | Apoptosis (flow cytometry: PtdSer exposure) | Surface exposure of CRT (in vitro and in vivo), release of ATP and HMGB1 | Phenotypic maturation of DCs (CD83 high, CD86 high), production of IL-12 | PDT-treated 4T1 cells growing in BALB/c mice: |
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| Hybrid protein oxygen nanocarrier with chlorin e6 encapsulated (C@HPOC). | N/D | 4T1 murine mammary carcinoma | N/D | Surface exposure of CRT (in vitro and in vivo); release of HMGB1 and ATP | Phenotypic maturation of DCs (surface upregulation of CD86 and MHC II) | PDT-treated 4T1 tumor-bearing BALB/c mice: tumor infiltration of NK cells, CD8+ and CD4+ T cells, |
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| Hyaluronidase-responsive size-reducible biomimetic nanoparticles, coated with RBC membrane and loaded with PS pheophorbide A, ROS-responsive paclitaxel dimer prodrug (PXTK) and anti-PD-L1 peptide dPPA | HA bound to CD44 overexpressed on 4T1 cells | 4T1 murine mammary carcinoma | N/D | Surface exposure of CRT; release of HMGB1 | N/D | Treatment of 4T1 tumor-bearing BALB/c mice with pPP-mCAuNCs@HA+laser: intratumoral infiltration of CD8+ and CD4+T cells, proliferation of CD8+ T cells, |
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| Redox-activated porphyrin-based liposome remote-loaded with indoximod (IND@RAL) | RAL co-localized in lysosomes, then PS was released and translocated to the whole cytoplasm, including mitochondria | 4T1 murine mammary carcinoma | Apoptosis | Surface exposure of CRT (in vitro and in vivo); release of ATP and HMGB1 | N/D | IND@RAL-PDT treated 4T1 cells growing in BALB/c mice: infiltration of cytotoxic T lymphocyte, |
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| Nanosystem consists of ER-targeting pardaxin (FAL) peptides modified, indocyanine green (ICG)-conjugated hollow gold nanospheres (FAL-ICG-HAuNS), together with an oxygen-delivering hemoglobin liposome | ER | CT26 murine colon carcinoma, B16 murine melanoma | Apoptosis in CT26 cells (WB: caspase-3 cleavage and CHOP expression) | Surface exposure of CRT in CT26 and B16 cells | N/D | PDT+PTT-treated CT26 cells growing in BALB/c mice: DC maturation in lymph nodes, |
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| The covering macrophage membrane with shape changeable carriers (chlorin e6/BR-FFVLK-PEG) co-incorporated with paclitaxel (PTX) and indoximod (IND) in the core | N/D | 4T1 murine mammary carcinoma | Apoptosis (flow cytometry: positive staining to annexin V-FITC) | Surface exposure of CRT and HMGB1; release of ATP and HMGB1 (in vitro); expression of HMGB1 and CRT (in vivo) | N/D | Therapeutic and prophylactic vaccination model using PDT-treated 4T1 cells in BALB/c mice: |
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| pH-responsive nanovesicles self-assembled from block copolymer polyethylene glycol b-cationic polypeptide co-encapsulated with a PS HPPH and indoximod (pRNVs/HPPH/IND) | Endosome/lysosome then drug released in cytoplasm and ER | B16F10 murine melanoma | Apoptosis | Surface exposure of CRT | N/D | pRNVs/HPPH/IND-PDT treated B16F10 cells growing in C57BL/6 mice: |
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| Phase-transition nanoparticles loaded with perfluoropentane, indocyanine green and oxaliplatin | N/D | ID8 murine ovarian surface epithelium | Apoptosis | Surface exposure of CRT; release of ATP; translocation and release of HMGB1 | N/D | Prophylactic vaccination model using OI_NPs-PSD treated ID8 cells in C57BL/6 mice; |
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| Janus nanobullets integrating chlorin e6 loaded, disulfide-bridged mesoporous organosilica bodies with magnetic heads, cloaked with breast cancer cell membrane (CM@M-MON@Ce6) | N/D | MCF-7 human ductal carcinoma, 4T1 murine mammary carcinoma | N/D | Surface exposure of CRT; release of HMGB1 (in MCF-7 cells); release of HMGB1 (for 4T1 cells in vivo) | Phenotypic maturation of DCs (CD11c, CD80, CD86) | CM@M-MON@Ce6-magnetic hyperthermia-PDT treated 4T1 tumors growing in BALB/c mice: |
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| The metal–organic framework-based nanoparticles self-assembled from H2TCPP and zirconium ions with hypoxia inducible factor signaling inhibitor (ACF) and immunogenic adjuvant (CpG) loading, and hyaluronic acid coating on the surface (PCN-ACF-CpG@HA) | Hyaluronic acid bind to CD44-overexpressed on the plasma membrane of H22 cancer cells | H22 murine hepatocellular carcinoma | N/D | N/D | Phenotypic maturation of DCs (CD83high, CD86 high, CD317 high, MHC II high), production of IL-12p70, IFN-γ and TNF-α | PDT-treatment of H22 tumor-bearing BALB/c mice: DC maturation in TDLNs, |
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| Nanoparticles for targeting mitochondria via co-assembling doxorubicin with triphenylphosphonium-tailored IR780 derivative (T780) along with bovine serum albumin as biomimetic corona (BSA@T780/DOX NPs) | Mitochondria | 4T1 murine mammary carcinoma | Apoptosis | Surface exposure of CRT; release of HSP70 | Proliferation of T cells co-incubated with photo-chemotherapeutic-treated 4T1 cells | Treatment of 4T1 tumor-bearing BALB/c mice with BSA@T780/DOX NPs: |
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| Serum albumin-coated boehmite (B; aluminum hydroxide oxide) organic-inorganic scaffold, loaded with chlorin e6, and a honeybee venom melittin (MLT) peptide (Ce6/MLT@SAB) | Cytoplasm (for Ce6/MLT@SA), endosomal/lysosomal distribution for Ce6 | 4T1 murine mammary carcinoma | Apoptosis/secondary necrosis | Surface exposure of CRT; release of ATP | Maturation of BMDCs (upregulation of CD80 and CD86) | Photo-treatment of 4T1 tumor-bearing BALB/c mice with anti-PD-1+Ce6/MLT@SAB: |
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| Polydopamine nanoparticles coated with an upconversion layer of NaGdF4:Yb/Er shell and surface-loaded chlorin e6 | N/D | 4T1 murine mammary carcinoma | Apoptosis | Surface exposure of CRT | N/D | Treatment of 4T1 tumor-bearing BALB/c mice with PDT/PTT: DCs maturation in TDNLs (CD80high, CD86 high); |
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| Iridium photocatalyst | Mitochondria | A549 human lung carcinoma | Apoptosis (fluorescent microscopy: PtdSer exposure) | Surface exposure of CRT; release of HMGB1 | N/D | N/D |
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| Liposomes encapsulated in protoporphyrin IX conjugated with NLG919 (IDO inhibitor) | N/D | 4T1 murine mammary carcinoma | Apoptosis/secondary necrosis (flow cytometry: PtdSer exposure and PI) | Surface exposure of CRT; release of ATP | N/D | Treatment of 4T1 tumor-bearing BALB/c mice with PpIX-NLG@Lipo-PDT: |
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| Smart nano-enabled platform, in which IR780 and tirapazamine were coloaded in poly(ε-caprolactone)-poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG-PCL) | N/D | 4T1 murine mammary carcinoma | N/D | Surface exposure of CRT (in vitro and in vivo); release of ATP and HMGB1 | BMDCs maturation (surface upregulation of CD83 and CD86), production of IL-12. | Treatment of BALB/c mice with PEG-PCL-IR780-TPZ NPs+laser-treatment of the 4T1 tumors: |
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| Light-inducible nanocargo (LINC) (reduction-responsive heterodimer of PS pheophorbide A (PPa)+NLG919 (IDO-1 inhibitor+oxaliplatin). LINC were preirradiated with 671 nm laser to cleave the PEG corona (LINCL) | N/D | 4T1 murine mammary carcinoma | Apoptosis (for 4T1 treated with LINC+laser) (identified by H&E and TUNEL staining) | Surface exposure of CRT and release of ATP and HMGB1 (for both LINC +laser and LINCL +laser). | BMDCs maturation (surface upregulation of CD80 and CD86). | Treatment of BALB/c mice bearing 4T1 tumors with LINCL +laser irradiation: |
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| Cu-5,10,15,20-tetrabenzoatoporphyrin (Cu-TBP) nanoscale metal-organic framework (nMOF) | N/D | B16F10 murine melanoma | Apoptosis | Surface exposure of CRT | N/D | Treatment of B16F10 tumor-bearing C57BL/6 mice with Cu-TBP+light irradiation+a-PD-L1: |
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| cRGD target liposome with the thymidine conjugate (2 Cl compound) | cRGD binds to αvβ3 integrin receptor, overexpressed on the plasma membrane of cancer cells | MCF-7 human breast cancer, H22 murine hepatocellular carcinoma | N/D | Increased CRT+ cell population; release of ATP and HMGB1 | N/D | Prophylactic vaccination model using cRGD-lipo 2Cl+UVA activation treated H22 cells in BALB/c mice |
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| Core-shell gold nanocage coated with manganese dioxide and hyaluronic acid (AMH) | Hyaluronic acid binds to CD44-overexpressed on the plasma membrane of CT26. WT cancer cells | CT26 WT murine colon carcinoma | Apoptosis (flow cytometry: PtdSer exposure) | Surface exposure of CRT; release of ATP | Phenotypic maturation of DCs (CD83high, CD86 high, MHC II high) | N/D |
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| PEG-s-s-1,2-distearoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine-N-(amino(polyethylene glycol) 2000)nanoparticles loaded with TCPP-TER (4,4',4'',4'''-(porphyrin-5,10,15,20-tetrayl)tetrakis(N-(2-((4methylphenyl)sulfonamido)ethyl)benzamide) (Ds-sP/TCPP-TER NPs) | ER | 4T1 murine mammary carcinoma | N/D | Surface exposure of CRT; release of HMGB1 ( | Maturation of BMDCs (surface upregulation of CD80 and CD86), production of TNF-α and IL-12p40 | PDT-treated 4T1 tumor-bearing mice: |
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BMDC, bone marrow-derived dendritic cell; CD, cluster of differentiation; CHOP, C/EBP-homologous protein-10; CRT, calreticulin; DC, dendritic cell; ER, endoplasmic reticulum; HAuNS, hollow gold nanospheres; HMGB1, high-mobility group protein box 1; HSP, heat shock protein; ICD, immunogenic cell death; IFN, interferon; IL, interleukin; MHC, major histocompatibility complex; N/D, not detected; NK, natural killer; PDT, photodynamic therapy; PI, propidium iodide; PS, photosensitizer; PtdSer, phosphatidylserine; TDLNs, tumor draining lymph nodes; TNF, tumor necrosis factor; Tregs, regulatory T cells; TUNEL, terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated nick end labeling analysis; WB, western blot analysis.