Smart Tumor Cell-Derived DNA Nano-Tree Assembly for On-Demand Macrophages Reprogramming.
Zhiguo ChenSha YangZhuyang ZhaoLiu FengJing ShengRuijia DengBinpan WangYuan HeDan LuoMing ChenLei ChenKai ChangPublished in: Advanced science (Weinheim, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany) (2023)
Without coordinated strategies to balance the population and activity of tumor cells and polarized macrophages, antitumor immunotherapy generally offers limited clinical benefits. Inspired by the "eat me" signal, a smart tumor cell-derived proximity anchored non-linear hybridization chain reaction (Panel-HCR) strategy is established for on-demand regulation of tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs). The Panel-HCR is composed of a recognition-then-assembly module and a release-then-regulation module. Upon recognizing tumor cells, a DNA nano-tree is assembled on the tumor cell surface and byproduct strands loaded with CpG oligodeoxynucleotides (CpG-ODNs) are released depending on the tumor cell concentration. The on-demand release of CpG-ODNs can achieve efficient regulation of M2 TAMs into the M1 phenotype. Throughout the recognition-then-assembly process, tumor cell-targeted bioimaging is implemented in single cells, fixed tissues, and living mice. Afterward, the on-demand release of CpG-ODNs regulate the transformation of M2 TAMs into the M1 phenotype by stimulating toll-like receptor 9 to activate the NF-κB pathway and increasing inflammatory cytokines. This release-then-regulation process is verified to induce strong antitumor immune responses both in vitro and in vivo. Altogether, this proposed strategy holds tremendous promise for on-demand antitumor immunotherapy.