Chemotherapy-Sensitized In Situ Vaccination for Malignant Osteosarcoma Enabled by Bioinspired Calcium Phosphonate Nanoagents.
Yangyun WangYanxian WuLiubing LiChunjie MaShaodian ZhangSubin LinLeshuai W ZhangYong WangMingyuan GaoPublished in: ACS nano (2023)
How to effectively treat malignant osteosarcoma remains clinically challenging. Programmed delivery of chemotherapeutic agents and immunostimulants may offer a universal strategy for killing osteosarcoma cells while simultaneously eliciting in situ antitumor immunity. However, targeted chemoimmunotherapy lacks a reliable delivery system. To address this issue, we herein developed a bioinspired calcium phosphonate nanoagent that was synthesized by chemical reactions between Ca 2+ and phosphonate residue from zoledronic acid using bovine serum albumin as a scaffold. In addition, methotrexate combination with a phosphorothioate CpG immunomodulator was also loaded for pH-responsive delivery to enable synergistic chemoimmunotherapy of osteosarcoma. The calcium phosphonate nanoagents were found to effectively accumulate in osteosarcoma for nearly 1 week, which is favorable for exerting the vaccination effects in situ by maturing dendritic cells and priming CD8 + T cells to suppress the osteosarcoma progression and pulmonary metastasis through controlled release of the three loaded agents in the acidic tumor microenvironment. The current study may thus offer a reliable delivery platform for achieving targeted chemotherapy-induced in situ antitumor immunity.