AI Article Synopsis

  • The study introduces a light-triggered PROTAC (LPN) nanoassembly that targets and degrades the immunosuppressive enzyme IDO in tumor environments, aiming to enhance cancer treatment effectiveness.
  • LPNs are designed to self-assemble from specific components, allowing them to accumulate in tumors, stay inactive initially, and release active PROTACs when triggered by the biomarker cathepsin B.
  • Upon light activation, this system not only induces cell death in cancer cells but also counters immunosuppression, which may significantly reduce tumor growth and recurrence while combining multiple therapeutic approaches for better cancer immunotherapy.

Article Abstract

While proteolysis-targeting chimeras (PROTACs) hold great potential for persistently reprogramming the immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment via targeted protein degradation, precisely activating them in tumor tissues and preventing uncontrolled proteolysis at off-target sites remain challenging. Herein, a light-triggered PROTAC nanoassembly (LPN) for photodynamic indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO) proteolysis is reported. The LPN is derived from the self-assembly of prodrug conjugates, which comprise a PROTAC, cathepsin B-specific cleavable peptide linker, and photosensitizer, without any additional carrier materials. In colon tumor models, intravenously injected LPNs initially silence the activity of PROTACs and accumulate significantly in targeted tumor tissues due to an enhanced permeability and retention effect. Subsequently, the cancer biomarker cathepsin B begins to trigger the release of active PROTACs from the LPNs through enzymatic cleavage of the linkers. Upon light irradiation, tumor cells undergo immunogenic cell death induced by photodynamic therapy to promote the activation of effector T cells, while the continuous IDO degradation of PROTAC simultaneously blocks tryptophan metabolite-regulated regulatory-T-cell-mediated immunosuppression. Such LPN-mediated combinatorial photodynamic IDO proteolysis effectively inhibits tumor growth, metastasis, and recurrence. Collectively, this study presents a promising nanomedicine, designed to synergize PROTACs with other immunotherapeutic modalities, for more effective and safer cancer immunotherapy.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/adma.202405475DOI Listing

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