Injectable hydrogels have attracted increasing attention for promoting systemic antitumor immune response through the co-delivery of chemotherapeutics and immunomodulators. However, the biosafety and bioactivity of conventional hydrogel depots are often impaired by insufficient possibilities for post-gelling injection and means for biofunction integration. Here, an unprecedented injectable stimuli-responsive immunomodulatory depot through programming a super-soft DNA hydrogel adjuvant is reported. This hydrogel system encoded with adenosine triphosphate aptamers can be intratumorally injected in a gel formulation and then undergoes significant molecular conformation change to stimulate the distinct release kinetics of co-encapsulated therapeutics. In this scenario, doxorubicin is first released to induce immunogenic cell death that intimately works together with the polymerized cytosine-phosphate-guanine oligodeoxynucleotide (CpG ODN) in gel scaffold for effectively recruiting and activating dendritic cells. The polymerized CpG ODN not only enhances tumor immunogenicity but minimizes free CpG-induced splenomegaly. Furthermore, the subsequently released anti-programmed cell death protein ligand 1 (aPDL1) blocks the corresponding immune inhibitory checkpoint molecule on tumor cells to sensitize antitumor T-cell immunity. This work thus contributes to the first proof-of-concept demonstration of a programmable super-soft DNA hydrogel system that perfectly matches the synergistic therapeutic modalities based on chemotherapeutic toxicity, in situ vaccination, and immune checkpoint blockade.
Keyphrases
- hyaluronic acid
- tissue engineering
- drug delivery
- dendritic cells
- cancer therapy
- circulating tumor
- immune response
- single molecule
- dna methylation
- cell free
- cell death
- wound healing
- nucleic acid
- early stage
- photodynamic therapy
- signaling pathway
- dna damage
- oxidative stress
- regulatory t cells
- cell cycle
- squamous cell carcinoma
- diabetic rats
- small molecule
- drug induced
- molecular dynamics simulations
- circulating tumor cells
- gene expression
- high glucose
- endothelial cells
- cell proliferation
- protein kinase
- fluorescence imaging
- drug release