Mannosylated STING Agonist Drugamers for Dendritic Cell-Mediated Cancer Immunotherapy.
Dinh Chuong NguyenKefan SongSimbarashe JokonyaOmeed YazdaniDrew L SellersYonghui WangAbm ZakariaSuzie H PunPatrick S StaytonPublished in: ACS central science (2024)
The Stimulator of Interferon Genes (STING) pathway is a promising target for cancer immunotherapy. Despite recent advances, therapies targeting the STING pathway are often limited by routes of administration, suboptimal STING activation, or off-target toxicity. Here, we report a dendritic cell (DC)-targeted polymeric prodrug platform (polySTING) that is designed to optimize intracellular delivery of a diamidobenzimidazole (diABZI) small-molecule STING agonist while minimizing off-target toxicity after parenteral administration. PolySTING incorporates mannose targeting ligands as a comonomer, which facilitates its uptake in CD206 + /mannose receptor + professional antigen-presenting cells (APCs) in the tumor microenvironment (TME). The STING agonist is conjugated through a cathepsin B-cleavable valine-alanine (VA) linker for selective intracellular drug release after receptor-mediated endocytosis. When administered intravenously in tumor-bearing mice, polySTING selectively targeted CD206 + /mannose receptor + APCs in the TME, resulting in increased cross-presenting CD8 + DCs, infiltrating CD8 + T cells in the TME as well as maturation across multiple DC subtypes in the tumor-draining lymph node (TDLN). Systemic administration of polySTING slowed tumor growth in a B16-F10 murine melanoma model as well as a 4T1 murine breast cancer model with an acceptable safety profile. Thus, we demonstrate that polySTING delivers STING agonists to professional APCs after systemic administration, generating efficacious DC-driven antitumor immunity with minimal side effects. This new polymeric prodrug platform may offer new opportunities for combining efficient targeted STING agonist delivery with other selective tumor therapeutic strategies.
Keyphrases
- cancer therapy
- dendritic cells
- drug release
- drug delivery
- small molecule
- lymph node
- regulatory t cells
- immune response
- oxidative stress
- high throughput
- genome wide
- type diabetes
- case report
- young adults
- gene expression
- skeletal muscle
- cell cycle arrest
- photodynamic therapy
- rectal cancer
- insulin resistance
- dna methylation
- binding protein
- single cell