Dual Gate-Controlled Therapeutics for Overcoming Bacterium-Induced Drug Resistance and Potentiating Cancer Immunotherapy.
Xiaodong ZhangXiaokai ChenYuxin GuoGe GaoDongdong WangYinglong WuJiawei LiuGaolin LiangRongjun ZhaoFu-Gen WuPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2021)
The presence of bacteria in the tumor can cause cancer resistance to chemotherapeutics. To fight against bacterium-induced drug resistance, herein we design self-traceable nanoreservoirs that are simultaneously loaded with gemcitabine (an anticancer drug) and ciprofloxacin (an antibiotic) and are decorated with hyaluronic acid for active tumor targeting. The nanoreservoirs have a pH-sensitive gate and an enzyme-responsive gate that can be opened in the acidic and hyaluronidase-abundant tumor microenvironment to control drug release rates. Moreover, the nanoreservoirs can specifically target the tumor regions without eliciting evident toxicity to normal tissues, kill the intratumoral bacteria, and inhibit the tumor growth even in the presence of the bacteria. Unexpectedly, the nanoreservoirs can activate T cell-mediated immune responses through promoting antigen-presenting dendritic cell maturation and depleting immunosuppressive myeloid-derived suppressor cells in bacterium-infected tumors.
Keyphrases
- hyaluronic acid
- drug release
- dendritic cells
- cancer therapy
- drug delivery
- immune response
- high glucose
- drug induced
- gene expression
- small molecule
- regulatory t cells
- squamous cell carcinoma
- cell cycle arrest
- cell proliferation
- radiation therapy
- quantum dots
- inflammatory response
- endothelial cells
- adverse drug
- childhood cancer