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Long-term combined blockade of CXCR4 and PD-L1 with in vivo reassembly for intensive tumor interference. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Negative immune signals and low immunogenicity allow cancer cells to evade the immune system; blocking CXCR4 enhances T cell infiltration and effectiveness of anti-PD-L1 therapy.
  • pH-responsive nanomaterials (APAB) carrying therapeutic agents respond to the acidic tumor environment, increasing their potency and targeting ability while remaining stable for over 96 hours.
  • Combined treatment with APAB and photothermal therapy effectively suppressed tumor growth in mice and reduced metastasis, suggesting a promising approach for future cancer immunotherapy developments.

Article Abstract

Negative immunoregulatory signal (PD-L1, CXCR4, et al.) and weak immunogenicity elicited immune system failing to detect and destroy cancerous cells. CXCR4 blockade promoted T cell tumor infiltration and increased tumor sensitivity to anti-PD-L1 therapy. Here, pH-responsive reassembled nanomaterials were constructed with anti-PD-L1 peptide and CXCR4 antagonists grafting (APAB), synergized with photothermal therapy for melanoma and breast tumor interference. The self-assembled APAB nanoparticles accumulated in the tumor and rapidly transformed into nanofibers in response to the acidic tumor microenvironment, leading to the exposure of grafted therapeutic agents. APAB enabling to reassemble around tumor cells and remained stable for over 96 h due to the aggregation induced retention (AIR) effect, led to long-term efficiently combined PD-L1 and CXCR4 blockade. Photothermal efficiency (ICG) induced immunogenic cell death (ICD) of tumor cells so as to effectively improve the immunogenicity. The combined therapy (ICG@APAB) could effectively inhibit the growth of primary tumor (∼83.52%) and distant tumor (∼76.24%) in melanoma-bearing mice, and significantly (p < 0.05) prolong the survival time over 42 days. The inhibition assay on tumor metastasis in 4 T1 model mice exhibited ICG@APAB almostly suppressed the occurrence of lung metastases and the expression levels of CD31, MMP-9 and VEGF in tumor decreased by 82.26%, 90.45% and 41.54%, respectively. The in vivo reassembly strategy will offer novel perspectives benefical future immunotherapies and push development of combined therapeutics into clinical settings.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jconrel.2024.04.048DOI Listing

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