4.8 Article

In Situ Self-Assembly Nanomicelle Microneedles for Enhanced Photoimmunotherapy via Autophagy Regulation Strategy

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 15, Issue 2, Pages 3387-3401

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.0c10396

Keywords

photoimmunotherapy; autophagy inhibition; dissolving microneedles; nanomicelles; self-assembly; immunogenic cell death

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation [81803466]
  2. Research and Development Plan for Key Areas in Guangdong Province [2019B020204002]
  3. Key Areas Research and Development Program of Guangzhou [202007020006]

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An in situ self-assembled nanomicelle dissolving micro-needle patch was designed for intralesional delivery of immunogenic cell death-inducer and autophagy inhibitor for efficient antitumor therapy. The patch, with photothermal properties, effectively penetrates deep tumor tissue, precisely ablating tumors, and reshaping the tumor immunosuppressive microenvironment.
Although certain therapeutic agents with immunogenic properties may enhance antitumor immunity, cancer cells can eliminate harmful cytoplasmic entities and escape immunosurveillance by orchestrating autophagy. Here, an ingenious in situ self-assembled nanomicelle dissolving micro-needle (DMN) patch was designed for intralesional delivery of immunogenic cell death-inducer (IR780) and autophagy inhibitor (chloroquine, CQ) coencapsulated micelles (C/I-Mil) for efficient antitumor therapy. Upon insertion into skin, the self-assembled C/I-Mil was generated, followed by electrostatic binding of hyaluronic acid, the matrix material of DMNs, accompanied by the dissolution of DMNs. Subsequently, photothermal-mediated size-tunable C/I-Mil could effectively penetrate into deep tumor tissue and be massively internalized via CD44 receptor-mediated endocytosis, precisely ablate tumors with the help of autophagy inhibition, and promote the release of damage-associated molecular patterns. Moreover, CQ could also act as an immune modulator to remodel tumor-associated macrophages toward the M1 phenotype via activating NF-kappa B. In vivo results showed that the localized photoimmunotherapy in synergy with autophagy inhibition could effectively eliminate primary and distant tumors, followed by a relapse-free survival of more than 40 days via remodeling the tumor immunosuppressive microenvironment. Our work provides a versatile, generalizable framework for employing self-assembled DMN-mediated autophagy inhibition integrated with photoimmunotherapy to sensitize superficial tumors and initiate optimal antitumor immunity.

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