AI Article Synopsis

  • - Adoptive cell transfer (ACT) has shown success in treating blood cancers, but its effectiveness is hampered by issues like unclear tumor antigens and immune suppression from the tumor environment.
  • - The study introduces a method that uses cytotoxic T cells loaded with a photosensitizer (PS) called Temoporfin, enhancing their ability to generate reactive oxygen species (ROS) when exposed to visible light.
  • - Results from murine lymphoma models indicate that these PS-loaded T cells (PS-OT-1) significantly improve tumor growth inhibition when combined with light treatment compared to standard ACT, suggesting a promising new cancer treatment strategy.

Article Abstract

Adoptive cell transfer (ACT) has shown remarkable therapeutic efficacy against blood cancers such as leukemia and lymphomas, but its effect is still limited due to the lack of well-defined antigens expressed by aberrant cells within tumors, the insufficient trafficking of administered T cells to the tumor sites, as well as immunosuppression induced by the tumor microenvironment (TME). In this study, we propose the adoptive transfer of photosensitizer (PS)-loaded cytotoxic T cells for a combinational photodynamic and cancer immunotherapy. Temoporfin (Foscan), a clinically applicable porphyrin derivative, was loaded into OT-1 cells (PS-OT-1 cells). The PS-OT-1 cells efficiently produced a large amount of reactive oxygen species (ROS) under visible light irradiation in a culture; importantly, the combinational photodynamic therapy (PDT) and ACT with PS-OT-1 cells induced significant cytotoxicity compared to ACT alone with unloaded OT-1 cells. In murine lymphoma models, intravenously injected PS-OT-1 cells significantly inhibited tumor growth compared to unloaded OT-1 cells when the tumor tissues were locally irradiated with visible light. Collectively, this study suggests that combinational PDT and ACT mediated by PS-OT-1 cells provides a new approach for effective cancer immunotherapy.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10143374PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics15041295DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • - Adoptive cell transfer (ACT) has shown success in treating blood cancers, but its effectiveness is hampered by issues like unclear tumor antigens and immune suppression from the tumor environment.
  • - The study introduces a method that uses cytotoxic T cells loaded with a photosensitizer (PS) called Temoporfin, enhancing their ability to generate reactive oxygen species (ROS) when exposed to visible light.
  • - Results from murine lymphoma models indicate that these PS-loaded T cells (PS-OT-1) significantly improve tumor growth inhibition when combined with light treatment compared to standard ACT, suggesting a promising new cancer treatment strategy.
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