AI Article Synopsis

  • Tumor cells need a lot of glucose and produce lactate through anaerobic glycolysis, creating a unique environment that helps them grow and evade the immune system.
  • To manage lactate levels in this tumor microenvironment (TME), researchers designed protein nanoparticles with lactate oxidase (LOX) and catalase (CAT) to break down lactate effectively.
  • The combination of LOX and CAT in these nanoparticles showed promising results in reducing tumor growth and modulating the TME by favoring immune cells that fight tumors, while minimizing harmful effects in a study on mice.

Article Abstract

The aggressive proliferation of tumor cells often requires increased glucose uptake and excessive anaerobic glycolysis, leading to the massive production and secretion of lactate to form a unique tumor microenvironment (TME). Therefore, regulating appropriate lactate levels in the TME would be a promising approach to control tumor cell proliferation and immune suppression. To effectively consume lactate in the TME, lactate oxidase (LOX) and catalase (CAT) were displayed onto Aquifex aeolicus lumazine synthase protein nanoparticles (AaLS) to form either AaLS/LOX or AaLS/LOX/CAT. These complexes successfully consumed lactate produced by CT26 murine colon carcinoma cells under both normoxic and hypoxic conditions. Specifically, AaLS/LOX generated a large amount of HO with complete lactate consumption to induce drastic necrotic cell death regardless of culture condition. However, AaLS/LOX/CAT generated residual HO, leading to necrotic cell death only under hypoxic condition similar to the TME. While the local administration of AaLS/LOX to the tumor site resulted in mice death, that of AaLS/LOX/CAT significantly suppressed tumor growth without any severe side effects. AaLS/LOX/CAT effectively consumed lactate to produce adequate amounts of HO which sufficiently suppress tumor growth and adequately modulate the TME, transforming environments that are favorable to tumor suppressive neutrophils but adverse to tumor-supportive tumor-associated macrophages. Collectively, these findings showed that the modular functionalization of protein nanoparticles with multiple metabolic enzymes may offer the opportunity to develop new enzyme complex-based therapeutic tools that can modulate the TME by controlling cancer metabolism.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9811728PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12951-022-01762-6DOI Listing

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