Tumor tissues/cells are the best sources of antigens to prepare cancer vaccines. However, due to the difficulty of solubilization and delivery of water-insoluble antigens in tumor tissues/cells, including water-insoluble antigens into cancer vaccines and delivering such vaccines efficiently to antigen-presenting cells (APCs) remain challenging. To solve these problems, herein, water-insoluble components of tumor tissues/cells are solubilized by 8 m urea and thus whole components of micrometer-sized tumor cells are reasssembled into nanosized nanovaccines. To induce maximized immunization efficacy, various antigens are loaded both inside and on the surface of nanovaccines. By encapsulating both water-insoluble and water-soluble components of tumor tissues/cells into nanovaccines, the nanovaccines are efficiently phagocytosed by APCs and showed better therapeutic efficacy than the nanovaccine loaded with only water-soluble components in melanoma and breast cancer. Anti-PD-1 antibody and metformin can improve the efficacy of nanovaccines. In addition, the nanovaccines can prevent lung cancer (100%) and melanoma (70%) efficiently in mice. T cell analysis and tumor microenvironment analysis indicate that tumor-specific T cells are induced by nanovaccines and both adaptive and innate immune responses against cancer cells are activated by nanovaccines. Overall, this study demonstrates a universal method to make tumor-cell-based nanovaccines for cancer immunotherapy and prevention.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/adma.202104849DOI Listing

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