| Literature DB >> 35292030 |
Jiangbin Chen1, Qi Tan1, Zimo Yang1, Yang Jin2.
Abstract
Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are a group of secretory vesicles with cell-derived membrane and contents. Due to the cargo delivery capability, EVs can be designed as drug delivery platforms for cancer therapy. Biocompatibility and immune compatibility endow EVs with unique advantages compared with other nanocarriers. With the development of this field, multiple ingenious modification methods have been developed to obtain engineered EVs with desired performance. Application of engineered EVs in cancer therapy has gradually shifted from monotherapy to combinational therapy to fight against heterogeneous cancer cells and complex tumor microenvironment. In addition, the strong plasticity and load capacity of engineered EV make it potential to achieve various combinations of cancer treatment methods. In this review, we summarize the existing schemes of cancer combination therapy realized by engineered EVs, highlight the mechanisms and representative examples of these schemes and provide guidance for the future application of engineered EVs to design more effective cancer combination treatment plans.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer therapy; Combinational therapy; Engineered EVs; Extracellular vesicles (EVs)
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35292030 PMCID: PMC8922858 DOI: 10.1186/s12951-022-01330-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Nanobiotechnology ISSN: 1477-3155 Impact factor: 10.435
Fig. 1Existing schemes of cancer combination therapy based on engineered EVs. Chemotherapy-related combination, immunotherapy-related combination, and visual therapy are three main categories. Other schemes, such as the combination of new and traditional therapy, combination of three or more drugs, are increasingly mentioned in recent studies. PDT photodynamic therapy; PTT photothermal therapy; ICI immune checkpoint inhibitors; ICB immune checkpoint blockade
Fig. 2Brief biology of exosomes and microvesicles. Exosomes are formed in the endosome circulation as intraluminal vesicles (ILVs), which are derived from the multivesicular endosomes (MVEs). Microvesicles originate by a direct budding at the plasma membrane. After biogenesis, some exosomes and microvesicles will target the recipient cells. Through the binding of receptor and ligand, endocytosis pathway, or direct membrane fusion, exosomes and microvesicles will complete the cargo delivering and intracellular communication mission
Fig. 3Strategies of EV engineering. EV modification (right) is a direct method to obtain engineered EVs, including passive loading cargo, EV membrane modification, hybridization, and biomimetic EV production. Producing cell modification (left) is the indirect method to get engineered EVs through engineering parent cells by active loading cargo or genetic manipulation
Engineered EVs for chemotherapy-related combination therapy
| Scheme | Principle/mechanism | Source of EV | EV type | Engineering strategy | Cargoes | Membrane modification | Effects | Refs. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chemotherapy combined with anti-drug resistance treatment | Co-delivery of P-gp siRNA and DOX by engineered EVs | RBC | Mimic vesicles | Incubated with vesicles | P-gp siRNA and DOX | Aptamer modification | Overcame drug resistance and killed MDR tumors | [ |
| Tumor cell-derived EVs can directly down-regulate P-gp expression | Bel7402 cells | Biomimetic EVs | Incubated with producing cells | PSINPs loaded with DOX | Possessed cellular uptake and cytotoxicity in both bulk cancer cells and cancer stem cells | [ | ||
| HEK293T cells | EVs | Incubated with producing cells, the obtained EV were mixed with LipHA | DOX | LipHA modification | Inhibited MDR tumor growth by 89% and extended animal survival time by approximately 50% | [ | ||
| Co-delivery of anti-miRNA and drugs | HCT-1165FR cell line | Exosomes | Electroporation | MiR21i and 5-FU | Reversed drug resistance and enhanced the cytotoxicity in 5-FU-resistant colon cancer cells | [ | ||
| HEK293T cell culture | Exosomes | Cell transfection | Anti-miR-214 | Reversed the resistance to cisplatin in gastric cancer | [ | |||
| 4T1 cells | Tumor cell-derived EVs | Anti-miR-21 was transfected to producing cells, the obtained EVs and the GIONs were extruded through 100 nm porous membranes | Anti-miR-214 and GIONs | Attenuated DOX resistance, resulted in effective photothermal effect and demonstrated excellent T2 MR imaging | [ | |||
| Combinational chemo-photothermal therapy | Co-delivery PTA and chemotherapy drugs. Appropriate temperature rise boosted the susceptibility of cancer cells to chemotherapy and reduce their drug resistance | DC2.4 | EVs | Incubated with EVs | DOX | Self-grown gold nanoparticles | Improved cellular internalization, controlled drug release, enhanced antitumor efficacy and reduced side effects | [ |
| H22 cells | Microparticles | Electroporation | Bi2Se3 nanodots and DOX | Resulted in synergistic antitumor efficacy by combining PTT with chemotherapy | [ | |||
| HeLa cells | Microvesicles | Electroporation | ICG and DOX | Almost all the tumor cells could be killed by the synergistic effect of the released DOX and ICG | [ | |||
| 4T1 cells | Biomimetic exosomes | Exosomes were mixed with MSNs and then processed through extrusion | ICG and DOX | ICG produced hyperthermia to collapse E-MSNs nanovehicles, achieving effective chemo-photothermal therapy | [ | |||
| Chemotherapy combined with gene therapy | Exosomes as delivery platforms of CRISPR/Cas9 | SKOV3 cells | Cancer-derived exosomes | Electroporation | CRISPR/Cas9-targeting PARP-1 | Suppressed the expression of PARP-1 and enhanced the chemosensitivity to cisplatin, resulting in the apoptosisof cancer cells | [ | |
| Co-delivery of therapeutic nucleic acids and chemotherapeutic drugs | Cal 27 cells | Microvesicles | Modified parent cells to get MVs with the membraneodified with biotin and folate, the Bcl-2 siRNA and PTX were packaged into these MVs by electroporation | Bcl-2 siRNA and PTX | Biotin and folate | Enhanced target and synergistic therapy toward breast cancer | [ | |
| Combinational delivery of nanoparticles and drugs | Modified chemotherapeutics-loaded NPs by using EV membrane | MDA-MB-231 cells | Biomimetic exosomes | The mixture of PCNPs and exosome membrane was coextruded by a 220 nm polycarbonate porous membrane | PTX-S-LA and CuB loaded PEG-PCL NPs | Enhanced breast cancer metastasis inhibition | [ | |
| Patient’s urine | Biomimetic exosomes | Electroporation | PMA/Fe-HSA @DOX | Achieved superior synergistic low-dose chemo/chemodynamic performance g | [ | |||
| Macrophages | Biomimetic exosomes | Exosomes were mixed with PLGA and coextruded through a 100 nm membrane, then peptides were decorated on the exosomal membrane | Poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA) nanoparticles loaded DOX | Peptides that can target tumor cells | Exhibited tumor-targeting efficacy, inhibited tumor growth and induced intense tumor apoptosis | [ |
P-gp P-glycoprotein; DOX doxorubicin; RBC red blood cell; MDR multi-drug resistance; PSINPs porous silicon nanoparticles; LipHA lipid-grafted hyaluronic acid; 5-FU 5-fluorouracil; GIONs gold–iron oxide nanoparticles; PTA photothermal agents; PTT photothermal therapy; ICG indocyanine green; E-MSNs exosome-camouflaged mesoporous silica nanoparticles; PARP-1 poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase-1; MVs microvesicles, NPs nanoparticles; PLGA poly (lactic-co- glycolic acid)
Fig. 4Engineered EVs for the combination of chemotherapy with anti-drug resistance treatment. Mono-chemotherapy often induces multi-drug resistance (MDR) in cancer cells. Engineered EVs as delivery platforms can realize co-delivery of anti-MDR substances like P-glycoprotein (P-gp) siRNA and chemotherapeutic drugs to suppress MDR and improve the chemotherapeutic effects
Fig. 5Engineered EVs for combinational chemo-photothermal therapy. Engineered EVs can co-delivery chemotherapeutic drugs and photothermal agents (PTAs) to tumor sites. Under near-infrared (NIR) irradiation, PTAs convert optical energy into heat for photothermal therapy (PTT). The elevated temperature can induce the collapse of the structure of engineered EVs and the controllable release of chemotherapeutic drugs to realize chemotherapy. Chemotherapy combined with PTT induces cancer cell death
Engineered EVs for immunotherapy-related cancer combination therapy
| Scheme | Principle/mechanism | Source of EV | EV type | Engineering strategy | Cargoes | Membrane modification | Effects | Refs. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Immunotherapy combined with chemotherapy | Co-delivery of chemotherapeutic drugs and immunomodulator. Chemotherapy induce ICD and activate immune effector cells | Fibroblasts | Thermosensitive exosome—liposome hybrid nanoparticle | Fusion of engineered exosomes and drug-loaded thermosensitive liposomes by freeze—thaw method | GM-CSF and docetaxel | CD47 overexpression | Inhibited tumor development | [ |
| BM-MSCs | Exosomes | Electroporation was applied to load galectin-9 siRNA, OXA-MAL was added to the exosomes via vortexing | Galectin-9 siRNA | OXA | Elicited anti-tumor immunity and inhibited tumor growth | [ | ||
| Immunotherapy combined with PDT or PTT | Co-delivery of immunostimulatory and PS or PTA. PDT and PTT can induce ICD and covert “cold” tumor into “hot” tumor | MSCs | EVs | Turbulence induced high-yield production of MSC-derived EVs encapsulating mTHPC | Photosensitizer mTHPC | Permitted important tumoral necrosis and decreased intratumor proliferation | [ | |
| CT26 cells | Hybrid vesicles | Fusion of exosomes and thermosensitive liposomes | ICG and adjuvant R837 | CD47 overexpression | Eliminated the tumors | [ | ||
| ICI combined with anti-ICI resistance treatment | Anti-ICI resistance treatment could improve ICI resistance | RAW264.7 macrophages | Microparticles | RAW264.7 macrophages were incubated with DSPE-PEG-Man and then were treated with metformin | Metformin | Mannose | Improved anticancer efficacy and long-term memory immunity | [ |
| Therapeutic cancer vaccine combined with immune checkpoint blockade | Engineered EVs as vaccines, ICI can boost and maintain the vaccine’s effect to produce persistent responses | B16F10 cells/CT26 cells | Tumor-derived microparticles (T-MPs) | Incubated nano-Fe3O4 with producing cells, the obtained MPs were incubated with CpG-loaded liposome | Nano-Fe3O4 | CpG-loaded liposome | Inhibited tumor progression | [ |
| BMDCs | Exosomes | Exosomes prepared from ovalbumin-pulsed, activated DCs were modified with anti-CTLA-4 antibody | Anti-CTLA-4 antibody | Slowed down tumor growth | [ |
GM-CSF granulocyte–macrophage colony-stimulating factor; OXA oxaliplatin; MAL N-(2-Aminoethyl) maleimide; PDT photodynamic therapy; PTT photothermal therapy; PS photosensitizers; PTA photothermal agents; ICD immunogenic cell death; ICG indocyanine green; mTHPC meta(tetrahydroxyphenyl)-chlorin; ICI immune checkpoint inhibitors
Fig. 6Engineered EVs for the combination of immunotherapy with chemotherapy. Immunomodulatory materials and chemotherapeutic drugs are co-delivered to the tumor microenvironment by engineered EVs. Immunomodulatory materials reprogram immunosuppressive cells to immune effector cells. Chemotherapy can induce immunogenic cell death (ICD) and expose more tumor antigens, facilitating better immunotherapy
Fig. 7Engineered EVs for the combination of cancer vaccine with immune checkpoint blockade. EVs derived from mature dendritic cells are modified with immune checkpoint inhibitors. These engineered EVs can realize the combination of cancer vaccine and immune checkpoint blockade, effectively activating T cells to inhibit tumor growth
Fig. 8Engineered EVs for visual therapy. Co-delivery of imaging agent and therapeutic agent by engineered EVs can achieve both tumor imaging and treatment at the same time