Neutrophil hitchhiking nanoparticles enhance bacteria-mediated cancer therapy via NETosis reprogramming.

J Control Release

School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Zhengzhou University, Zhengzhou 450001, China; Key Laboratory of Targeting Therapy and Diagnosis for Critical Diseases, Zhengzhou University, Zhengzhou 450001, PR China; Key Laboratory of Key Drug Preparation Technology Ministry of Education, Zhengzhou 450001, PR China. Electronic address:

Published: March 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Scientists are finding that certain bacteria, like a special type of Salmonella called VNP20009, can help fight tumors safely in cancer treatments.
  • However, when these bacteria enter tumors, they attract immune cells called neutrophils, which try to eliminate them and make the treatment less effective.
  • To solve this, researchers created special nanoparticles (SPPS) that help control neutrophils and protect the bacteria, leading to better tumor treatment with high success rates in mice.

Article Abstract

Bacteria have shown great potential in anti-tumor treatment, and an attenuated strain of Salmonella named VNP20009 has been shown to be safe in clinical trials. However, colonized bacteria recruit neutrophils into the tumor, which release NETs to capture and eliminate bacteria, compromising bacterial-based tumor treatment. In this study, we report a neutrophil hitchhiking nanoparticles (SPPS) that block the formation of NET to enhance bacteria-mediated tumor therapy. In the 4 T1 tumor-bearing mouse model, following 24 h of bacterial therapy, there was an approximately 3.0-fold increase in the number of neutrophils in the bloodstream, while the amount of SPPS homing to tumor tissue through neutrophil hitchhiking increased approximately 2.0-fold. It is worth noting that the NETs in tumors significantly decreased by approximately 2.0-fold through an intracellular ROS scavenging-mediated NETosis reprogramming, thereby increasing bacterial vitality by 1.9-fold in tumors. More importantly, the gene drug (siBcl-2) loaded in SPPS can be re-encapsulated in apoptotic bodies by reprogramming neutrophils from NETosis to apoptosis, and enable the redelivery of drugs to tumor cells, further boosting the antitumor efficacy with a synergistic effect, resulting in about 98% tumor inhibition rate and 90% survival rate.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jconrel.2024.01.068DOI Listing

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