Publication | Closed Access
Artificially Reprogrammed Macrophages as Tumor‐Tropic Immunosuppression‐Resistant Biologics to Realize Therapeutics Production and Immune Activation
195
Citations
31
References
2019
Year
NanoparticlesNanotherapeuticsEngineeringImmune ActivationReprogrammed MacrophagesHions Enable MacrophagesImmunologyTherapeutics ProductionBiological TherapyImmunotherapeuticsBiomedical EngineeringImmune Cell TherapyImmunotherapyTherapeuticsTumor BiologySynthetic ImmunologyInflammationNanomedicineTumor ImmunologyTherapeutic NanomaterialsTumor ImmunityChemodynamic TherapyMatrix BiologyCell-based Drug DeliveryTherapeutic BiologicsTumor TargetingCell EngineeringCell BiologyTumor MicroenvironmentCancer ImmunosurveillancePatient-derived CellsNano-drug DeliveryImmunomodulationMedicine
To engineer patient-derived cells into therapy-purposed biologics is a promising solution to realize personalized treatments. Without using gene-editing technology, a live cell-typed therapeutic is engineered for tumor treatment by artificially reprogramming macrophages with hyaluronic acid-decorated superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles (HIONs). This nanoparticle-assisted cell-reprogramming strategy demonstrates profound advantages, due to the combined contributions from the biological regulation of HIONs and the intrinsic nature of macrophages. Firstly, the reprogrammed macrophages present a substantial improvement in their innate capabilities, such as more effective tumor targeting and more efficient generation of bioactive components (e.g., reactive oxygen species, bioactive cytokines) to suppress tumor growth. Furthermore, this cell therapeutic exhibits cytostatic/proapoptotic effects specific to cancer cells. Secondly, HIONs enable macrophages more resistant to the intratumoral immunosuppressive environment. Thirdly, the macrophages are endowed with a strong ability to prime in situ protumoral M2 macrophages into antitumor M1 phenotype in a paracrine-like manner. Consequently, a synergistic tumor-inhibition effect is achieved. This study shows that engineering nanomaterial-reprogrammed live cells as therapeutic biologics may be a more preferable option to the commonly used approaches where nanomaterials are administrated to induce bioresponse of certain cells in vivo.
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