Inducing Optimal Antitumor Immune Response through Coadministering iRGD with Pirarubicin Loaded Nanostructured Lipid Carriers for Breast Cancer Therapy.
Caifeng DengMengdi JiaGuangfei WeiTiantian TanYao FuHuile GaoXun SunQuan ZhangTao GongZhi-Rong ZhangPublished in: Molecular pharmaceutics (2016)
Chemotherapeutic agents trigger antitumor immune response through inducing immunogenic tumor cell death. However, severe toxicity to immune system and insufficient immunogenic cell death hinder chemotherapy from arousing efficient antitumor immunity in vivo. In this study, the cytotoxic drug, pirarubicin (THP), was entrapped into nanostructured lipid carriers (NLC); THP-NLC significantly reduced the toxicity of THP to immune system and improved immune status of breast cancer bearing mice. When THP-NLC was coinjected with iRGD (a tumor-penetrating peptide), drug accumulation in tumors was greatly elevated, which led to significant control of tumor growth and increase of immunogenic tumor cell death. Subsequently, the cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CD3+ and CD8+ cells) infiltration and cytokine (IFN-γ and INF-α) secretion in tumors were heavily increased. The efficient T-cell dependent control of tumors in the late stage and the lower side effects contributed to the longest whole survival of THP-NLC + iRGD treated mice. Therefore, the coadministration of THP-NLC with iRGD resulted in increased tumor cell direct-killing death and enhanced antitumor immune response. Our results illustrated that THP could serve as an immunogenic cell death inducer and the proposed drug delivery strategy might impact cancer immunotherapy by arousing increased immunogenic tumor cell death.
Keyphrases
- cell death
- immune response
- cell cycle arrest
- drug delivery
- cancer therapy
- dendritic cells
- oxidative stress
- type diabetes
- stem cells
- radiation therapy
- induced apoptosis
- squamous cell carcinoma
- fatty acid
- toll like receptor
- young adults
- emergency department
- skeletal muscle
- metabolic syndrome
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- insulin resistance
- rectal cancer
- wound healing
- newly diagnosed