Chaelin Lee, Chaerin Kwak, Minhyun Choi, Ahban Kim, Seongjin Kim, Inmoo Rhee
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Advancing immunotherapy with innovations in CAR-M engineering for cancer treatment
Chimeric antigen receptor macrophage (CAR-M) therapy is emerging as a promising immunotherapeutic strategy designed to overcome the limitations of T cell-based CAR therapies in solid tumors. However, CAR-T cells have shown limited efficacy in solid tumors due to poor tumor penetration and strong immunosuppressive signals in the tumor microenvironment (TME). CAR-M therapy has emerged as a promising alternative that may overcome these limitations. CAR-Ms are engineered macrophages that detect tumor antigens, enabling their accumulation in solid tumors where they destroy cancer cells by phagocytosis. Unlike CAR-T cells, CAR-Ms can remodel the TME and initiate innate and adaptive immune responses with lower risk of cytokine release syndrome (CRS). This review presents current approaches for engineering CAR-Ms and discusses how they engage tumor antigens within the TME. We also summarize recent advances in CAR-M delivery systems and functional design and highlight the status of clinical and preclinical studies evaluating CAR-M-based therapies. Despite remaining limitations, CAR-M therapy provides a compelling platform for solid tumor immunotherapy and is likely to play an expanding role in future cancer treatment.
期刊介绍:
International Immunopharmacology is the primary vehicle for the publication of original research papers pertinent to the overlapping areas of immunology, pharmacology, cytokine biology, immunotherapy, immunopathology and immunotoxicology. Review articles that encompass these subjects are also welcome.
The subject material appropriate for submission includes:
• Clinical studies employing immunotherapy of any type including the use of: bacterial and chemical agents; thymic hormones, interferon, lymphokines, etc., in transplantation and diseases such as cancer, immunodeficiency, chronic infection and allergic, inflammatory or autoimmune disorders.
• Studies on the mechanisms of action of these agents for specific parameters of immune competence as well as the overall clinical state.
• Pre-clinical animal studies and in vitro studies on mechanisms of action with immunopotentiators, immunomodulators, immunoadjuvants and other pharmacological agents active on cells participating in immune or allergic responses.
• Pharmacological compounds, microbial products and toxicological agents that affect the lymphoid system, and their mechanisms of action.
• Agents that activate genes or modify transcription and translation within the immune response.
• Substances activated, generated, or released through immunologic or related pathways that are pharmacologically active.
• Production, function and regulation of cytokines and their receptors.
• Classical pharmacological studies on the effects of chemokines and bioactive factors released during immunological reactions.