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Membrane-fusion-mediated Multiplex Engineering of Tumor Cell Surface Glycans for Enhanced NK Cell Therapy.

Chunxiong ZhengQingguo ZhongWantong SongKe YiHuimin KongHaixia WangYu TaoMingqiang LiXuesi Chen
Published in: Advanced materials (Deerfield Beach, Fla.) (2022)
Natural killer (NK) cell therapies show potential for tumor treatment but were immunologically resisted by the overexpressed immunosuppressing tumor-cell-surface glycans. To reverse this glycan-mediated immunosuppression, the surface NK-inhibitory glycan expressions need to be downregulated and NK-activating glycan levels should be elevated synchronously with optimal efficiency. Here, we design a core-shell membrane-fusogenic liposome (MFL) to simultaneously achieve the physical modification of NK-activating glycans and biological inhibition of immunosuppressing glycans on the tumor cell surface via a membrane-fusion manner. Loaded into a tumor-microenvironment-triggered-degradable thermosensitive hydrogel, MFLs could be conveniently injected and controllably released into local tumor. Through fusion with tumor cell membrane, the released MFLs could simultaneously deliver sialyltransferase-inhibitor-loaded core into cytoplasm, and anchor NK-activating-glycan-modified shell onto tumor surface. This spatially-differential distribution of core and shell in one cell ensures the effective inhibition of intracellular sialyltransferase to downregulate immunosuppressing sialic acid, and direct presentation of NK-activating Lewis X trisaccharide (LeX) on tumor surface simultaneously. Consequentially, the sialic acid-caused immunosuppression of tumor surface was reprogrammed to be LeX-induced NK activation, resulting in sensitive susceptibility to NK-cell-mediated recognition and lysis for improved tumor elimination. This MFL provides a novel platform for multiplex cell engineering and personalized regulation of intercellular interactions for enhanced cancer immunotherapy. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
Keyphrases
  • cell surface
  • nk cells
  • signaling pathway
  • drug delivery
  • stem cells
  • high throughput
  • single cell
  • endothelial cells