Responsive Multivesicular Polymeric Nanovaccines that Codeliver STING Agonists and Neoantigens for Combination Tumor Immunotherapy.
Ting SuFurong ChengJialong QiYu ZhangShurong ZhouLei MeiShiwei FuFuwu ZhangShuibin LinGuizhi ZhuPublished in: Advanced science (Weinheim, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany) (2022)
Immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) has significantly advanced cancer immunotherapy, yet its patient response rates are generally low. Vaccines, including immunostimulant-adjuvanted peptide antigens, can improve ICB. The emerging neoantigens generated by cancer somatic mutations elicit cancer-specific immunity for personalized immunotherapy; the novel cyclic dinucleotide (CDN) adjuvants activate stimulator of interferon genes (STING) for antitumor type I interferon (IFN-I) responses. However, CDN/neoantigen vaccine development has been limited by the poor antigen/adjuvant codelivery. Here, pH-responsive CDN/neoantigen codelivering nanovaccines (NVs) for ICB combination tumor immunotherapy are reported. pH-responsive polymers are synthesized to be self-assembled into multivesicular nanoparticles (NPs) at physiological pH and disassembled at acidic conditions. NPs with high CDN/antigen coloading are selected as NVs for CDN/antigen codelivery to antigen presenting cells (APCs) in immunomodulatory lymph nodes (LNs). In the acidic endosome of APCs, pH-responsive NVs facilitate the vaccine release and escape into cytosol, where CDNs activate STING for IFN-I responses and antigens are presented by major histocompatibility complex (MHC) for T-cell priming. In mice, NVs elicit potent antigen-specific CD8 + T-cell responses with immune memory, and reduce multifaceted tumor immunosuppression. In syngeneic murine tumors, NVs show robust ICB combination therapeutic efficacy. Overall, these CDN/neoantigen-codelivering NVs hold the potential for ICB combination tumor immunotherapy.
Keyphrases
- dendritic cells
- lymph node
- immune response
- induced apoptosis
- early stage
- ionic liquid
- squamous cell
- genome wide
- type diabetes
- gene expression
- cell proliferation
- dna methylation
- signaling pathway
- drug release
- transcription factor
- high fat diet induced
- climate change
- cell death
- insulin resistance
- genome wide identification