4.7 Article

Second near-infrared photothermal-amplified immunotherapy using photoactivatable composite nanostimulators

Journal

JOURNAL OF NANOBIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 19, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12951-021-01197-5

Keywords

Second near-infrared light; Nanostimulators; Precise controlled release; Cancer immunotherapy; Photothermal therapy

Funding

  1. Shanghai Municipal Key Clinical Specialty [shslczdzk03202]
  2. Opening Project of State Key Laboratory of HighPerformance Ceramics and Superfine Microstructure [SKL201908SIC]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

A composite nanostimulator (CNS) was developed for spatiotemporally controlled release of second near-infrared (NIR-II) photothermal-mediated immune agents, achieving efficient suppression of tumor growth and prevention of metastasis in mouse models.
Background The construction of a nanoimmune controlled-release system that spatiotemporally recognizes tumor lesions and stimulates the immune system response step by step is one of the most potent cancer treatment strategies for improving the sensitivity of immunotherapy response. Results Here, a composite nanostimulator (CNS) was constructed for the release of second near-infrared (NIR-II) photothermal-mediated immune agents, thereby achieving spatiotemporally controllable photothermal-synergized immunotherapy. CNS nanoparticles comprise thermosensitive liposomes as an outer shell and are internally loaded with a NIR-II photothermal agent, copper sulfide (CuS), toll-like receptor-9 (TLR-9) agonist, cytosine-phospho-guanine oligodeoxynucleotides, and programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) inhibitors (JQ1). Following NIR-II photoirradiation, CuS enabled the rapid elevation of localized temperature, achieving tumor ablation and induction of immunogenic cell death (ICD) as well as disruption of the lipid shell, enabling the precise release of two immune-therapeutical drugs in the tumor region. Combining ICD, TLR-9 stimulation, and inhibited expression of PD-L1 allows the subsequent enhancement of dendritic cell maturation and increases infiltration of cytotoxic T lymphocytes, facilitating regional antitumor immune responses. Conclusion CNS nanoparticle-mediated photothermal-synergized immunotherapy efficiently suppressed the growth of primary and distant tumors in two mouse models and prevented pulmonary metastasis. This study thus provides a novel sight into photo-controllably safe and efficient immunotherapy.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available