Platelet Membrane-Camouflaged Magnetic Nanoparticles for Ferroptosis-Enhanced Cancer Immunotherapy.
Qin JiangKuang WangXingyu ZhangBoshu OuyangHaixia LiuZhiqing PangWuli YangPublished in: Small (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2020)
Although cancer immunotherapy has emerged as a tremendously promising cancer therapy method, it remains effective only for several cancers. Photoimmunotherapy (e.g., photodynamic/photothermal therapy) could synergistically enhance the immune response of immunotherapy. However, excessively generated immunogenicity will cause serious inflammatory response syndrome. Herein, biomimetic magnetic nanoparticles, Fe3 O4 -SAS @ PLT, are reported as a novel approach to sensitize effective ferroptosis and generate mild immunogenicity, enhancing the response rate of non-inflamed tumors for cancer immunotherapy. Fe3 O4 -SAS@PLT are built from sulfasalazine (SAS)-loaded mesoporous magnetic nanoparticles (Fe3 O4 ) and platelet (PLT) membrane camouflage and triggered a ferroptotic cell death via inhibiting the glutamate-cystine antiporter system Xc - pathway. Fe3 O4 -SAS @ PLT-mediated ferroptosis significantly improves the efficacy of programmed cell death 1 immune checkpoint blockade therapy and achieves a continuous tumor elimination in a mouse model of 4T1 metastatic tumors. Proteomics studies reveal that Fe3 O4 -SAS @ PLT-mediated ferroptosis could not only induce tumor-specific immune response but also efficiently repolarize macrophages from immunosuppressive M2 phenotype to antitumor M1 phenotype. Therefore, the concomitant of Fe3 O4 -SAS @ PLT-mediated ferroptosis with immunotherapy are expected to provide great potential in the clinical treatment of tumor metastasis.
Keyphrases
- magnetic nanoparticles
- cell death
- cancer therapy
- immune response
- inflammatory response
- cell cycle arrest
- mouse model
- drug delivery
- small cell lung cancer
- squamous cell carcinoma
- dendritic cells
- mass spectrometry
- signaling pathway
- genome wide
- toll like receptor
- dna methylation
- gene expression
- lipopolysaccharide induced
- risk assessment
- case report
- cell proliferation
- young adults