Radiotherapy is a traditional method for cancer therapy but may become ineffective likely due to the radiation-induced immunosuppression. Instead of simply increasing the radiation dose, reactivation of immunosuppression in the tumor microenvironment is an alternative strategy for successful cancer treatment. In this work, we synthesized bismuth sulfide nanoparticles (BiNP) and conjugated with immunoactive Ganoderma lucidum polysaccharide (GLP). GLP-BiNP were able to increase the sensitivity of radiotherapy, attributing to the efficient X-ray absorption of bismuth element. BiNP alone can mildly activate dendritic cells (DC) in vitro, while GLP-BiNP further enhanced the level of DC maturation, shown as the increase in phenotypic maturation markers, cytokine release, acid phosphatase activity, and T cell proliferation in DC/ T cell co-culture. Compared to BiNP, GLP-BiNP altered the tissue distribution with faster accumulation in the tumor. Meanwhile, mature DC greatly increased in both tumor and spleen by GLP-BiNP within 24 h. GLP-BiNP combination with radiation achieved remarkable inhibition of tumor growth through apoptosis. Alternatively, lung metastasis was largely prohibited by GLP-BiNP, shown as a reduced amount of tumor nodules and cancer cell invasion by pathological findings. Mechanistically, GLP-BiNP altered the tumor immunosuppression microenvironment by preferably increasing the number of intratumor CD8 + T cell proliferation, as well as the improved immunobalance shown as the increased serum interferon-γ/interleukin-4 ratio. Specifically, GLP conjugation seemed to protect the kidney from injury occasionally introduced by bare BiNP. As a result, GLP-BiNP play a dual role in tumor treatment through radiosensitization and immunoactivities.
Radiotherapy
was considered to induce an abscopal effect initiated
through antigen release and presented by dendritic cells (DC), while
the immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment (TEM) attenuated the
effects. Herein, we utilized bioactive polysaccharides extracted from
the natural herb Astragalus membranaceus and developed polysaccharide nanoparticles (ANPs) that can reverse
TEM and, accordingly, enhance the radiation-induced abscopal effect.
ANP showed ability to prolong the survival rate of tumor-bearing mice.
In addition, ANP dramatically inhibited the growth of the primary
tumor subjected to radiation as well as the secondary tumor distant
from the primary lesion. Mechanistic study demonstrated that an ANP-induced
immune response was mainly reflected by DC activation, represented
by phenotypic maturation and enhanced antigen presentation through
the TLR4 signaling pathway. Mature DC induced by ANP migrated to the
tumor-draining lymph node and initiated T-cell expansion. Specifically,
DC activation was successfully translated into an increase in CD4+ T/Treg and CD8+ T/Treg ratios
within both primary (irradiated) and secondary (unirradiated) tumors.
Our results also indicated that the systemic antitumor immune response
and immune memory were enhanced with the increase in IFN-γ production
and effector memory T-cell population. Our work provided a novel strategy
to facilitate the incorporation of immunoactive macromolecules purified
from natural herbs into modern nanotechnology in the era of immunotherapy.
Aim: To investigate the immune responses and antitumor efficacy of immunoactive polysaccharide functionalized gold nanocomposites (APS-AuNP). Materials & methods: Immunoregulation of APS-AuNP on dendritic cells/T cells in vitro was evaluated by flow cytometry and their inhibitions against primary/metastatic tumors were determined on 4T1-bearing mice model. Results & conclusion: APS-AuNP exhibited remarkable capability to induce dendritic cells maturation through phenotypic markers with functional changes, which further promoted T-cell proliferation and enhanced cytotoxicity against 4T1 tumor cells. The inhibitory rate of APS-AuNP against 4T1 primary tumor growth and pulmonary metastasis in mice was higher than paclitaxel-treated group. In addition, APS-AuNP exhibited strong capability to increase the population of CD4+/CD8+ T lymphocytes as well as effector memory cells rather than central memory cells.
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