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Near-Infrared Triggered Self-Accelerating Nanozyme Camouflaged with a Cancer Cell Membrane for Precise Targeted Imaging and Enhanced Cancer Immunotherapy.

Chenchen HuRuiyang ManHanxiang LiMingchao XiaZhengze YuBo Tang
Published in: Analytical chemistry (2023)
Although cancer immunotherapy has made encouraging progress, clinical therapeutic efficiency is often modest due to inadequate immunogenicity and immune resistance. Developing promising nanoagents for simultaneously activating tumor-specific immunity and suppressing immune resistance to achieve efficient immunotherapy is still challenging. Herein, we developed a biomimetic nanozyme consisting of a gold nanorod@mesoporous ceria core-shell scaffold with gold nanoparticle deposition and cancer cell membrane camouflage. The nanozyme exhibited near-infrared (NIR)-enhanced GOx-mimicking activity at high temperatures and performed well under hypoxic environments due to an increased in situ oxygen supply. In cancer cells, the nanozyme induced and amplified hyperthermia by triggering self-accelerating cascade reactions to deplete glucose and inhibiting the expression of heat shock protein under NIR irradiation, which can cause mitochondrial dysfunction and redox balance disruption to activate pyroptosis and elicit a robust immune response. Additionally, the immune checkpoint blockade caused by encapsulated JQ1-mediated PD-L1 downregulation synergistically contributed to excellent immune therapeutic effects. Besides, we demonstrated that cancer cell membrane coating endows the nanozyme targeting ability to tumor. The proposed nanozyme will broaden the application of GOx and have the potential as the nanoplatform for imaging-guided and O 2 -consuming combined treatments.
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