Engineered bacterial outer membrane vesicles encapsulating oncolytic adenoviruses enhance the efficacy of cancer virotherapy by augmenting tumor cell autophagy.
Weiyue BanMengchi SunHanwei HuangWanxu HuangSiwei PanPengfei LiuBingwu LiZhenguo ChengZhonggui HeFunan LiuJin SunPublished in: Nature communications (2023)
Oncolytic adenovirus (Ad) infection promotes intracellular autophagy in tumors. This could kill cancer cells and contribute to Ads-mediated anticancer immunity. However, the low intratumoral content of intravenously delivered Ads could be insufficient to efficiently activate tumor over-autophagy. Herein, we report bacterial outer membrane vesicles (OMVs)-encapsulating Ads as microbial nanocomposites that are engineered for autophagy-cascade-augmented immunotherapy. Biomineral shells cover the surface antigens of OMVs to slow their clearance during in vivo circulation, enhancing intratumoral accumulation. After entering tumor cells, there is excessive H 2 O 2 accumulation through the catalytic effect of overexpressed pyranose oxidase (P 2 O) from microbial nanocomposite. This increases oxidative stress levels and triggers tumor autophagy. The autophagy-induced autophagosomes further promote Ads replication in infected tumor cells, leading to Ads-overactivated autophagy. Moreover, OMVs are powerful immunostimulants for remolding the immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment, facilitating antitumor immune response in preclinical cancer models in female mice. Therefore, the present autophagy-cascade-boosted immunotherapeutic method can expand OVs-based immunotherapy.
Keyphrases
- oxidative stress
- cell death
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- signaling pathway
- induced apoptosis
- immune response
- diabetic rats
- papillary thyroid
- type diabetes
- dna damage
- toll like receptor
- body mass index
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- weight loss
- inflammatory response
- physical activity
- insulin resistance
- bone marrow
- simultaneous determination
- heat shock
- high glucose