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Dual-Responsive Nanomedicine Activates Programmed Antitumor Immunity through Targeting Lymphatic System.

Hong XiaoXiaoxia LiSimin LiangShuguang YangShisong HanJinsheng HuangXin-Tao ShuaiJie Ren
Published in: ACS nano (2024)
Effective antitumor immunotherapy depends on evoking a cascade of cancer-immune cycles with lymph nodes (LNs) as the initial sites for activating antitumor immunity, making drug administration through the lymphatic system highly attractive. Here, we describe a nanomedicine with dual responsiveness to pH and enzyme for a programmed activation of antitumor immune through the lymphatic system. The proposed nanomedicine can release the STING agonist diABZI-C2-NH 2 in the LNs' acidic environment to activate dendritic cells (DCs) and T cells. Then, the remaining nanomedicine hitchhikes on the activated T cells (PD-1 + T cells) through binding to PD-1, resulting in an effective delivery into tumor tissues owing to the tumor-homing capacity of PD-1 + T cells. The enzyme matrix metalloproteinase-2 (MMP-2) being enriched in tumor tissue triggers the release of PD-1 antibody (aPD-1) which exerts immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) therapy. Eventually, the nanomedicine delivers a DNA methylation inhibitor GSK-3484862 (GSK) into tumor cells, and then the latter combines with granzyme B (GZMB) to trigger tumor cell pyroptosis. Consequently, the pyroptotic tumor cells induce robust immunogenic cell death (ICD) enhancing the DCs maturation and initiating the cascading antitumor immune response. Study on a 4T1 breast tumor mouse model demonstrates the prominent antitumor therapeutic outcome of this nanomedicine through creating a positive feedback loop of cancer-immunity cycles including immune activation in LNs, T cell-mediated drug delivery, ICB therapy, and tumor cell pyroptosis-featured ICD.
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