| Literature DB >> 35200369 |
Albert Yu1,2, Xiaoyong Dai1,2, Zixian Wang1,2, Huaqing Chen1,2, Bing Guo3, Laiqiang Huang1,2.
Abstract
Immunotherapy is a promising modality of treatment for cancer. Immunotherapy is comprised of systemic and local treatments that induce an immune response, allowing the body to fight back against cancer. Systemic treatments such as cancer vaccines harness antigen presenting cells (APCs) to activate T cells with tumor-associated antigens. Small molecule inhibitors can be employed to inhibit immune checkpoints, disrupting tumor immunosuppression and immune evasion. Despite the current efficacy of immunotherapy, improvements to delivery can be made. Nanomaterials such as mesoporous silica can facilitate the advancement of immunotherapy. Mesoporous silica has high porosity, decent biocompatibility, and simple surface functionalization. Mesoporous silica can be utilized as a versatile carrier of various immunotherapeutic agents. This review gives an introduction on mesoporous silica as a nanomaterial, briefly covering synthesis and biocompatibility, and then an overview of the recent progress made in the application of mesoporous silica to cancer immunotherapy.Entities:
Keywords: cancer; drug delivery; immunotherapy; mesoporous silica nanoparticles; nanomaterial
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35200369 PMCID: PMC8869707 DOI: 10.3390/bios12020109
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biosensors (Basel) ISSN: 2079-6374
Figure 1Formation of ordered mesoporous materials from surfactant and silica precursor.
Types of ordered mesoporous silica.
| Type | Pore Size (nm) | SBET 1 (m2/g) | Structure | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MCM-41 | 1.5–8 | 1000–1200 | 2D hexagonal P6 mm | [ |
| MCM-48 | 2–5 | 1000–1250 | 3D cubic Ia3d | [ |
| SBA-15 | 4–10 | 700–1000 | 2D hexagonal P6 mm | [ |
1 Surface area based on Brunauer–Emmett–Teller (BET) theory.
Figure 2Fabrication methods for Hollow MSN (HMSN). (a) Dual surfactant soft template method (b) oil-in-water soft template method (c) water-in-oil soft template method (d) Metal and metal oxide hard template method (e) Polymer beads hard template method (f) Self-templating method of self-assembly (g) Selective-etching method of self-assembly.
Figure 3Properties of mesoporous silica and their effect in vivo. Effect of particle size, particle shape, surface functionalization, and pore structure should be considered in regard to cellular uptake, biodistribution, and toxicity.
Targeting modality for MSNs.
| Molecule Family | Molecule Type | Method of Action | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Protein | mAbs | Specific binding to tumor cell surface antigens | [ |
| Fabs | Specific binding to tumor cell surface antigens | [ | |
| Peptide | RGD | Binding to the overexpressed integrin αVβ3 | [ |
| CPPs | Interactions with cell membrane or surface proteins | [ | |
| Nucleic Acid | Aptamers | Specific binding to overexpressed receptor on tumor cell surface | [ |
| Small Molecule | Folate | Targets the overexpressed folate receptor α | [ |
| Hyaluronic Acid | Targets the overexpressed CD44 | [ |
Figure 4The Cancer-Immunity Cycle. The generation of an immune response to cancer is cyclical and can be divided into seven major steps. It starts from release of tumor-associated antigen and ends with the killing of cancer cells by T cells. Abbreviations: APCs, antigen presenting cells; CTLs, cytotoxic T lymphocytes. Reprinted with permission from Ref. [112]. Copyright 2021, Elsevier Inc.
Summary of recent works on mesoporous silica as a platform for cancer immunotherapy.
| Mesoporous Silica Type | Property | Payloads | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| bMSN | 50–60 nm, biodegradable | Carbon Nanodot | [ |
| MSN | 432 ± 198 nm, acetalated dextran coating, spermine | Cancer cell membrane, Trp2 | [ |
| XL-MSN | 100–200 nm, pore size ~25 nm | OVA, CpG | [ |
| THMSN | ~200 nm, pore size 3.6 nm, thickness ~22 nm, PEI coating | Trp2 | [ |
| bMSN | ~80 nm, pore size 5–10 nm, PEGylated, biodegradable | CpG, Ce6 | [ |
| HMSN | 340 ± 40 nm, thickness ~80 nm, 1-tetradecanol capped | PDA core, Gardiquimod | [ |
| MSN | ~100 nm, MOF capped | OVA, CpG | [ |
| MSN | 180–280 nm, pore size 3.2 nm biotin-avidin capped | Resiquimod | [ |
| XL-MSN | ~130 nm, pore size 20–30 nm, PEGylated | AuNP, CpG | [ |
| MSN | ~80 nm, pore size 7.8 nm/10.3 nm/12.9 nm | OVA | [ |
| DMON | ~200 nm, PEI coating, biodegradable | OVA, CpG | [ |
| bMSN | ~80 nm, pore size 5–10 nm, biodegradable | CDA | [ |
| MSN | 46.6 ± 0.3 nm, pore size 2.3 nm, PEGylated, TA-silane functionalized | cdG, RITC | [ |
| XL-MSN | ~100 nm | β-NaYF4:20%Yb,2%Er upconversion nanoparticles, MC540, Tumor cell fragment | [ |
| MSN and MSR | Particles: ~150 nm, pore size 20–30 nm | OVA, CpG, GM-CSF | [ |
| XL-MSN | ~300 nm, pore size 14.6–25 nm, ferumoxytol capped | aPD-L1, ferumoxytol | [ |
| MSN | 151.78 ± 5.57 nm, cancer cell membrane coated | Dacarbazine | [ |
| VH-MSN | ~260 nm, virus-like topography | DOX | [ |
| tHMS | ~200 nm, thickness ~20 nm | DOX | [ |
| bHMSN | ~180 nm, lipid bilayer coated, biodegradable | DOX, ATRA, IL-2 | [ |
| DMSN | 120–205 nm, pore size 6.7–12.7 nm, PEI-PEG capped/coated | TNF-α | [ |
| MSR | length 70 µm, width 4.5 µm, pore size 10.9 nm | aCD3, aCD28, IL-2 | [ |
Figure 5An extra-large pore MSN platform for co-delivery of antigen and agonist. (A) A schematic of the fabrication and vaccination process of the extra-large pore MSN (XL-MSN) co-loaded with antigen ovalbumin (OVA) and toll-like receptor 9 agonist CpG. (B) Fluorescence imaging of mouse injected with RITC-labeled XL-MSN. Shows accumulation of nanoparticles towards the lymph nodes. (C) Percentage of activated CD11c + CD86 + BMDCs and percentage of BMDCs presenting antigenic SIINFEKL peptide on the MHC-molecule. Analysis was through flow cytometry. Concentrations for secreted cytokines TNF-α and IL-12 from BMDCs measured by ELISA. (D) Memory T cell population for CD4+ and CD8+ T cells of vaccinated mice measured by flow cytometry. Error bars, mean ± s.d., * p < 0.05. Reprinted (adapted) with permission from Ref. [123]. Copyright 2021, American Chemical Society.
Figure 6A biodegradable MSN as a platform for dual modality positron emission tomography-guided photodynamic therapy and immunotherapy. (A) A schematic of the fabrication of bMSN(CpG/Ce6)-neoantigen nanovaccines. The bMSN was synthesized using an oil-water biphasic reaction system. CpG and Ce6 were loaded into the bMSN using electrostatic and hydrophobic interactions, respectively. Neoantigen was added after PEGylation through disulfide bonds. (B) Antitumor study on MC-38 tumor-bearing mice. Tumor growth curve after treatment with each group is shown. (C) Antitumor study on B16F10 tumor-bearing mice. Tumor growth curve after treatment with each group is shown. Error bars, mean ± s.d., * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01, *** p < 0.001, **** p < 0.0001. Reprinted (adapted) with permission from Ref. [125]. Copyright 2021, American Chemical Society.
Figure 7Small MSN of varying pore size loaded with OVA antigen. (A,B) Percentage of CD4+ T cells producing IL-4 and IFN-γ. (C,D) Percentage of CD8+ T cells producing IFN-γ and TNF-α. (E) Tumor growth curve of B16F10 cells. (F) Kaplan-Meier survival curve of mice comparing naïve, free OVA, and OVA@MSN. Error bars, mean ± s.d., * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01, *** p < 0.001 versus free OVA; ## p < 0.01 versus OVA@MSNs-S; § p < 0.05 versus OVA@MSNs-M. Reprinted (adapted) with permission from Ref. [130]. Copyright 2021, Science.
Figure 8A virus-like hollow mesoporous silica nanoparticle was loaded with DOX. (A) Design scheme of the VH-MSN. (B) Tumor growth curve of 4T1 cells and the photograph of tumors collected posttreatment (C,D) Flow cytometry of the percentage of CD80+ and CD86+ matured APCs and the serum levels of cytokine IFN-γ and IL-6. Reprinted (adapted) with permission from Ref. [138]. Copyright 2021, Elsevier.