Polymersomes with splenic avidity target red pulp myeloid cells for cancer immunotherapy.
Annelies C WautersJari F ScheerstraMandy M T van LeentAbraham Jozef Petrus TeunissenBram PriemThijs J BeldmanNils RotherRaphaël DuivenvoordenGeoffrey PrévotJazz MunitzYohana C A FredericoJeroen DeckersYuri van ElsasPatricia Mora-RaimundoGal ChenSheqouia A NautaAnna Vera D VerschuurArjan W GriffioenDavid P SchrijverTom AnbergenYudong LiHanglong WuAlexander Francesco MasonMarleen H M E van StevendaalEwelina KluzaRichard A J PostLeo A B JoostenMihai M NeteaClaudia CalcagnoZahi Adel FayadRoy van der MeelAvi SchroederLoai K E A AbdelmohsenWillem J M MulderJan C M Van HestPublished in: Nature nanotechnology (2024)
Regulating innate immunity is an emerging approach to improve cancer immunotherapy. Such regulation requires engaging myeloid cells by delivering immunomodulatory compounds to hematopoietic organs, including the spleen. Here we present a polymersome-based nanocarrier with splenic avidity and propensity for red pulp myeloid cell uptake. We characterized the in vivo behaviour of four chemically identical yet topologically different polymersomes by in vivo positron emission tomography imaging and innovative flow and mass cytometry techniques. Upon intravenous administration, relatively large and spherical polymersomes accumulated rapidly in the spleen and efficiently targeted myeloid cells in the splenic red pulp. When loaded with β-glucan, intravenously administered polymersomes significantly reduced tumour growth in a mouse melanoma model. We initiated our nanotherapeutic's clinical translation with a biodistribution study in non-human primates, which revealed that the platform's splenic avidity is preserved across species.
Keyphrases
- induced apoptosis
- bone marrow
- positron emission tomography
- cell cycle arrest
- computed tomography
- acute myeloid leukemia
- dendritic cells
- drug delivery
- cancer therapy
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- stem cells
- cell death
- oxidative stress
- high dose
- high throughput
- cell proliferation
- immune response
- cell therapy
- genetic diversity