AI Article Synopsis

  • * A new strategy involves creating engineered exosomes that target T cells and stimulate their response against tumors while blocking inhibitory factors.
  • * The developed bifunctional exosomes (EXO-OVA-mAb) enhance T-cell binding and activation, leading to significant tumor growth inhibition by improving the balance of effector T cells to regulatory T cells in tumors.

Article Abstract

The therapeutic efficacy of current cancer vaccines is far from optimal, mainly because of insufficient induction of antigen-specific T cells and because tumor cells can hijack immunosuppressive mechanisms to evade the immune responses. Generating specific, robust, and long-term immune responses against cancer cells and the attenuating of immunosuppressive factors are critical for effective cancer vaccination. Recently, the engineering of exosomes specifically bind to T cells, and then stimulating tumor-specific T-cell immune responses has emerged as a potential alternative strategy for cancer vaccination. In this study, we generated a bifunctional exosome combining the strategy of vaccination and checkpoint blockade. Exosomes prepared from Ovalbumin (OVA)-pulsed, activated dendritic cells were modified with anti-CTLA-4 antibody (EXO-OVA-mAb) to block this inhibitory molecule and to enhance the specificity of the exosomes toward T cells. Our study provides a unique strategy for functionalizing exosome membrane with anti-CTLA-4 antibody via lipid-anchoring method to synergize efficacy of cancer vaccination and immune checkpoint blockade against the tumor. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: We designed T-cell-targeting exosomes (EXO-OVA-mAb) decorated with costimulatory molecules, MHCs, antigenic OVA peptide, and anti-CTLA-4 antibody, combining the strategies of vaccines and checkpoint blockade. The exosomes showed enhanced binding to T cells in tumor-draining lymph nodes, effectively induced T-cell activation, and improved the tumor homing of effector T cells, ultimately significantly restraining tumor growth. Thus, EXO-OVA-mAb greatly facilitates T-cell targeting, induces a strong tumor-specific T-cell response, and increased the ratio of effector T cells/regulatory T cells within tumors, resulting in appreciable tumor growth inhibition.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.actbio.2020.08.008DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

immune responses
12
cancer vaccination
12
checkpoint blockade
12
anti-ctla-4 antibody
12
tumor-draining lymph
8
lymph nodes
8
cells
8
tumor-specific t-cell
8
blockade exosomes
8
tumor growth
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!