A Programmable Peptidic Hydrogel Adjuvant for Personalized Immunotherapy in Resected Stage Tumors.
Bihan WuJuan LiangXuejiao YangYu FangNan KongDinghao ChenHuaimin WangPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2024)
Adjuvant treatment after surgical resection usually plays an important role in delaying disease recurrence. Immunotherapy displays encouraging results in increasing patients' chances of staying cancer-free after surgery, as reported by recent clinical trials. However, the clinical outcomes of current immunotherapy need to be improved due to the limited responses, patient heterogeneity, nontargeted distribution, and immune-related adverse effects. This work describes a programmable hydrogel adjuvant for personalized immunotherapy after surgical resection. By filling the hydrogel in the cavity, this system aims to address the limited secretion of granzyme B (GrB) during immunotherapy and improve the low immunotherapy responses typically observed, while minimizing immune-related side effects. The TLR7/8 agonist imidazoquinoline (IMDQ) is linked to the self-assembling peptide backbone through a GrB-responsive linkage. Its release could enhance the activation and function of immune cells, which will lead to increased secretion of GrB and enhance the effectiveness of immunotherapy together. The hydrogel adjuvant recruits immune cells, initiates dendritic cell maturation, and induces M1 polarized macrophages to reverse the immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment in situ . In multiple murine tumor models, the hydrogel adjuvant suppresses tumor growth, increases animal survival and long-term immunological memory, and protects mice against tumor rechallenge, leading to effective prophylactic and therapeutic responses. This work provides a potential chemical strategy to overcome the limitations associated with immunotherapy.
Keyphrases
- early stage
- drug delivery
- clinical trial
- wound healing
- hyaluronic acid
- dendritic cells
- randomized controlled trial
- end stage renal disease
- inflammatory response
- prognostic factors
- squamous cell carcinoma
- tissue engineering
- signaling pathway
- regulatory t cells
- toll like receptor
- newly diagnosed
- genome wide
- lymph node
- high resolution
- climate change
- working memory
- cancer therapy
- peritoneal dialysis
- papillary thyroid
- ejection fraction
- single cell
- risk assessment
- young adults
- replacement therapy
- drug induced
- nuclear factor
- squamous cell
- high density
- high resolution mass spectrometry