Yongcan Liu, Jiayuan Hu, Yan Shu, Genyou Li, Fangfang Jin, Jun Ren, Jing Yang, Can Lin, Lisha Tang, Xingyu Wei, Minghui Sun, Xinyi Chen, Nan Wu, Zesong Yang, Ziwei Li, Ling Zhang
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: As a malignancy of hematopoietic origin, the standard-of-care cytoreductive chemotherapy can not provide satisfactory treatment effect for patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Immunotherapy has received increasing attention in leukemia treatment. However, the immunosuppressive microenvironment and low cancer immunogenicity of AML blasts create major obstacles to effectively inducing immune responses.
Methods: We developed an extracellular vesicle-based dual-delivery biosystem, which enhanced anti-AML immune responses by activating the immunogenicity of leukemia cells and relieving immunosuppression in AML allografted mice. Red blood cell-derived extracellular vesicles (REVs) were selected as delivery carriers due to the excellent biocompatibility. REVs were ligated with leukemia-targeting peptide P9 and subsequently loaded with immunogenic cell death (ICD) inducer (Doxorubicin, Dox) and indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase-1 siRNA (siIDO1) to construct a chemoimmunological cascade biosystem (REVs-Dox/siIDO1-P9).
Results: The biosystem can specifically deliver the loaded Dox and siIDO1 into target leukemia cells and was validated capable of inducing efficient ICD. ICD-mediated release of damage-associated molecular patterns synergistically functions with siIDO1-mediated IDO1 silence to effectually recruit CD8+ T cells and enhance CD8+ T cell's functions. In the AML mouse model, REVs-Dox/siIDO1-P9 can evoke a strong antileukemia response and prolong leukemia-bearing mice survival compared with REVs-Dox/siNC-P9 and REVs-siIDO1-P9.
Conclusion: Our findings indicate that the extracellular vesicle-based chemoimmunological cascade biosystem provides a novel strategy for AML treatment.
期刊介绍:
The Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer (JITC) is a peer-reviewed publication that promotes scientific exchange and deepens knowledge in the constantly evolving fields of tumor immunology and cancer immunotherapy. With an open access format, JITC encourages widespread access to its findings. The journal covers a wide range of topics, spanning from basic science to translational and clinical research. Key areas of interest include tumor-host interactions, the intricate tumor microenvironment, animal models, the identification of predictive and prognostic immune biomarkers, groundbreaking pharmaceutical and cellular therapies, innovative vaccines, combination immune-based treatments, and the study of immune-related toxicity.