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  2. Phototherapy and anti-GITR antibody-based therapy synergistically reinvigorate immunogenic cell death and reject established cancers

Phototherapy and anti-GITR antibody-based therapy synergistically reinvigorate immunogenic cell death and reject established cancers

  • Biomaterials. 2021 Feb:269:120648. doi: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2020.120648.
Qi Sun 1 Zhenzhen Yang 1 Meng Lin 1 Yiwei Peng 1 Rudong Wang 1 Yitian Du 1 Yu Zhou 1 Jiajia Li 1 Xianrong Qi 2
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Beijing Key Laboratory of Molecular Pharmaceutics and New Drug Delivery System, School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Peking University, Beijing, 100191, PR China.
  • 2 Beijing Key Laboratory of Molecular Pharmaceutics and New Drug Delivery System, School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Peking University, Beijing, 100191, PR China. Electronic address: [email protected].
Abstract

Phototherapy and immunogenic cell death (ICD) are powerful strategies to fight Cancer. However, their therapeutic outcomes are diminished by immunosuppressive and hypoxia microenvironment. Herein, a photo-based, immunomodulating and hypoxia-alleviated nanosystem, PDA-ICG@CAT-DTA-1, is proposed to achieve the synergism between phototherapy and immunotherapy. Catalase (CAT) and anti-GITR antibody (DTA-1) are loaded to photothermal agent and Photosensitizer composed PDA-ICG nanoparticles. The PDA-ICG@CAT-DTA-1 exhibits intrinsic local hyperthermia and enhanced ROS generation in tumor, and abrogates tumor immune suppression. It results in reduction of intratumoral FOXP3+ regulatory T cells (4.3-fold) and increase of CD4+ effector T cells (1.5-fold) compare with the control, and promotes damage associated molecular patterns generation to reinvigorate ICD effect. The potent antitumor of PDA-ICG@CAT-DTA-1 is proved in 4T1 bilateral tumor-bearing mice, with inhibition ratio of 95.1% for primary cancers and 68.7% for abscopal cancers. Our findings highlight great promise of the constructed versatility nanosystem to fix bottlenecks for Cancer therapy.

Keywords

Anti-GITR antibody; Immunogenic cell death; Immunotherapy; Phototherapy; Tumor immune suppression.

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