Dual-Epigenetically Relieving the MYC-Correlated Immunosuppression via an Advanced Nano-Radiosensitizer Potentiates Cancer Immuno-Radiotherapy.
Guohao WangJie YanHao TianBei LiXinying YuYuzhao FengWenxi LiSongtao ZhouYulun DaiPublished in: Advanced materials (Deerfield Beach, Fla.) (2024)
Cancer cells can upregulate the MYC expression to repair the radiotherapy-triggered DNA damage, aggravating therapeutic resistance and tumor immunosuppression. Epigenetic treatment targeting the MYC-transcriptional abnormality may intensively solve this clinical problem. Herein, 5-Aza (a DNA methyltransferase inhibitor) and ITF-2357 (a histone deacetylase inhibitor) are engineered into a tungsten-based nano-radiosensitizer (PWAI), to suppress MYC rising and awaken robust radiotherapeutic antitumor immunity. Individual 5-Aza depletes MYC expression but cannot efficiently awaken radiotherapeutic immunity. This drawback can be overcome by the addition of ITF-2357, which triggers cancer cellular type I interferon (IFN-I) signaling. Coupling 5-Aza with ITF-2357 ensures that PWAI does not evoke the treated model with high MYC-related immune resistance while amplifying the radiotherapeutic tumor killing, and more importantly promotes the generation of IFN-I signal-related proteins involving IFN-α and IFN-β. Unlike the radiation treatment alone, PWAI-triggered immuno-radiotherapy remarkably enhances antitumor immune responses involving the tumor antigen presentation by dendritic cells, and improves intratumoral recruitment of cytotoxic T lymphocytes and their memory-phenotype formation in 4T1 tumor-bearing mice. Downgrading the radiotherapy-induced MYC overexpression via the dual-epigenetic reprogramming strategy may elicit a robust immuno-radiotherapy.
Keyphrases
- dendritic cells
- immune response
- transcription factor
- early stage
- locally advanced
- radiation induced
- dna damage
- radiation therapy
- poor prognosis
- gene expression
- histone deacetylase
- dna methylation
- regulatory t cells
- papillary thyroid
- squamous cell carcinoma
- cell proliferation
- adipose tissue
- metabolic syndrome
- diabetic rats
- insulin resistance
- toll like receptor
- dna repair
- heat shock