| Literature DB >> 35904053 |
Huijuan Song1, Hao Sun1, Ningning He1, Chang Xu1, Yan Wang1, Liqing Du1, Yang Liu1, Qin Wang1, Kaihua Ji1, Jinhan Wang1, Manman Zhang1, Yeqing Gu1, Yumin Zhang1, Li Feng2, Olivier Tillement3, Weiwei Wang4, Qiang Liu1.
Abstract
Radiotherapy suffers from its high-dose radiation-induced systemic toxicity and radioresistance caused by the immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment. Immunotherapy using checkpoint blocking in solid tumors shows limited anticancer efficacy due to insufficient T-cell infiltration and inadequate systemic immune responses. Activation and guiding of irradiation by X-ray (AGuIX) nanoparticles with sizes below 5 nm have entered a phase III clinical trial as efficient radiosensitizers. This study aimed to develop a unique synergistic strategy based on AGuIX-mediated radiotherapy and immune checkpoint blockade to further improve the efficiency for B16 tumor therapy. AGuIX exacerbated radiation-induced DNA damage, cell cycle arrest, and apoptosis on B16 cells. More importantly, it could efficiently induce the immunogenic cell death of irradiated B16 tumor cells, and consequently trigger the maturation of dendritic cells and activation of systemic T-cell responses. Combining AGuIX-mediated radiotherapy with programmed cell death protein 1 blockade demonstrated excellent synergistic therapeutic effects in both bilateral and metastatic B16 tumor models, as indicated by a significant increase in the infiltration of effector CD8+ T cells and effective alleviation of the immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment. Our findings indicate that the synergy between radiosensitization and immunomodulation provides a new and powerful therapy regimen to achieve durable antitumor T-cell responses, which is promising for cancer treatment.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35904053 DOI: 10.1039/d2nr02620a
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanoscale ISSN: 2040-3364 Impact factor: 8.307