CD47型
癌症免疫疗法
癌症研究
癌症
免疫疗法
癌细胞
免疫系统
巨噬细胞
黑色素瘤
转移
材料科学
生物
免疫学
遗传学
生物化学
体外
作者
Lang Rao,Shukun Zhao,Churan Wen,Rui Tian,Lisen Lin,Bo Cai,Yue Sun,Fei Kang,Zhèn Yáng,Liangcan He,Jing Mu,Qian‐Fang Meng,Guangyu Yao,Ni Xie,Xiaohong Chen
标识
DOI:10.1002/adma.202004853
摘要
Immunomodulation of macrophages against cancer has emerged as an encouraging therapeutic strategy. However, there exist two major challenges in effectively activating macrophages for antitumor immunotherapy. First, ligation of signal regulatory protein alpha (SIRPα) on macrophages to CD47, a "don't eat me" signal on cancer cells, prevents macrophage phagocytosis of cancer cells. Second, colony stimulating factors, secreted by cancer cells, polarize tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) to a tumorigenic M2 phenotype. Here, it is reported that genetically engineered cell-membrane-coated magnetic nanoparticles (gCM-MNs) can disable both mechanisms. The gCM shell genetically overexpressing SIRPα variants with remarkable affinity efficiently blocks the CD47-SIRPα pathway while the MN core promotes M2 TAM repolarization, synergistically triggering potent macrophage immune responses. Moreover, the gCM shell protects the MNs from immune clearance; and in turn, the MN core delivers the gCMs into tumor tissues under magnetic navigation, effectively promoting their systemic circulation and tumor accumulation. In melanoma and breast cancer models, it is shown that gCM-MNs significantly prolong overall mouse survival by controlling both local tumor growth and distant tumor metastasis. The combination of cell-membrane-coating nanotechnology and genetic editing technique offers a safe and robust strategy in activating the body's immune responses for cancer immunotherapy.
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