Yongjiang
Li†
*ab,
Ciceron
Ayala-Orozco†
b,
Pradipta Ranjan
Rauta
b and
Sunil
Krishnan
*bc
aDepartment of Medical Oncology, Cancer Center, and State Key Laboratory of Biotherapy, West China Hospital, Sichuan University, Chengdu 610041, China. E-mail: yongjiangcarl@yeah.net; yli56@mdanderson.org
bDepartment of Experimental Radiation Oncology, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas 77030, USA. E-mail: skrishnan@mdanderson.org
cRadiation Oncology, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas 77030, USA
First published on 22nd August 2019
Cancer immunotherapy is emerging as a promising treatment modality that suppresses and eliminates tumors by re-activating and maintaining the tumor-immune cycle, and further enhancing the body's anti-tumor immune response. Despite the impressive therapeutic potential of immunotherapy approaches such as immune checkpoint inhibitors and tumor vaccines in pre-clinical and clinical applications, the effective response is limited by insufficient accumulation in tumor tissues and severe side-effects. Recent years have witnessed the rise of nanotechnology as a solution to improve these technical weaknesses due to its inherent biophysical properties and multifunctional modifying potential. In this review, we summarized and discussed the current status of nanoparticle-enhanced cancer immunotherapy strategies, including intensified delivery of tumor vaccines and immune adjuvants, immune checkpoint inhibitor vehicles, targeting capacity to tumor-draining lymph nodes and immune cells, triggered releasing and regulating specific tumor microenvironments, and adoptive cell therapy enhancement effects.
Cancer can be regarded as a genetic disease that involves genes with key roles in cell proliferation and differentiation, which gives the cells ability to proliferate out of control and invade regional or distant regions.6 The immune system is also responsible for recognizing and destroying the aberrant cells, and prevents the occurrence or development of cancer, which requires the immune cells to have the ability to effectively recognize cancer versus normal cells.7,8 Mature T-lymphocytes and B-lymphocytes are actually the remaining cells that have passed the negative clonal selection during their development in thymus and bone marrow, in which lymphocytes expressing high affinity antigen receptors to self-antigens are eliminated. Although the negative clonal selection process reduces the harm of autoimmunity to the body, it also eliminates the cell clones having the specificity that could potentially target and resist cancer cells. As a result, the minority proteins encoded by chromosomal aberrations or synthesized through altered post-translational modifications that are exclusively to tumor cells, also named tumor-associated antigens (TAAs), have become the crucial subject for immune cells to recognize cancer cells.9,10 In some cases, the immunogenic TAAs could be normal self-proteins that are not expressed in differentiated cells or only expressed at a low level, but expressed or overexpressed in cancer cells.
Rapid growth of tumors is often accompanied by vast tumor cell death due to hypoxia or accumulation of gene mutation, which will lead to the release of damage-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs) and TAAs.11 The DAMPs can stimulate and recruit phagocytes and APCs, which process and present TAA-derived peptides to tumor-specific lymphocytes through the major histocompatibility complex (MHC). The activated CD8+ cytotoxic T-lymphocytes specifically recognize and eliminate the cancer cells through TCR-mediated recognition of TAA epitopes displayed by tumor MHC-I molecules or through the combination of the NKG2D receptor on CD8+ cytotoxic T-lymphocytes and NKG2D ligands expressed on tumor cells. Activated CD4+ T-lymphocytes generate cytokines including tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α and interferon-γ that are able to inhibit tumor growth while also upregulating MHC-I expression on tumor cells, thus assisting the target recognition by TAA-specific CD-8+ T-lymphocytes12 (Fig. 1).
Fig. 1 The cancer-immunity cycle that involves exposure or release of tumor antigens, tumor antigen processing and presentation by APCs, priming and activation of effective immune cells and formation of memory cells, trafficking and infiltration of T cells to tumor tissues, and the recognition and killing of tumor cells. Reprinted from ref. 10, Copyright (2019), with permission from Elsevier. |
Immune system activation towards cancer cells leads to a competition wherein immune cells inhibit fast cellular proliferation and mutation fosters tumor growth, but the formation of a detectable tumor is often the result of the failure of body immunity to tumor cells. If the immunity could not eradicate all the tumor cells at the beginning, it usually forms a selective force to tumor cell clones that can alter the composition of tumors, and gradually leave and promote the growth of tumor cell clones with the least immunogenicity. Ultimately, the immunoediting effect often gives rise to the most invasive and uncontrolled tumors formed by the most insensitive cells.13 Tumor cells have several mechanisms that assist in evading from being detected and eliminated by the immune system:
(1) Downregulation of MHC-I on tumor cells as a consequence of mutations of MHC genes or molecules involved in TAA antigen processing and presentation can reduce immunogenicity of tumor cells and evade cytotoxic T-lymphocyte mediated lysis.14
(2) Tumor cells could suppress immunity by expressing programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) that binds to the negative co-stimulator programmed death (PD)-1 on lymphocyte's membrane, or by secreting immunosuppression cytokines that suppress the activation and differentiation of APCs and lymphocytes, such as transforming growth factor (TGF)-β.15,16
(3) Tumor cells could resist cytotoxic T-lymphocyte mediated killing effects by expressing granzyme serine proteases to inhibit the perforin/granzyme pathway that mediates tumor cell lysis, and decoy receptors for cell death including soluble Fas, osteoprotegerin and decoy receptor-3, 4. In addition, increased expression of oncogenic and antiapoptotic molecules such as the signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 and B-cell lymphoma 2 (Bcl2) also resists T-lymphocyte mediated lysis.17
(4) Immunoregulatory cells with immunosuppressive effects, such as myeloid-derived suppressor cells and M2 type tumor-associated macrophages, could be recruited by tumor cells in the tumor microenvironment, which could produce immunosuppressive cytokines, and also secrete the vascular endothelial growth factor and matrix metalloproteinases that favor tumor angiogenesis for tumor growth and invasion.18,19
(5) A physical barrier around the tumor could be generated by tumor cells through secreting a series of molecules such as collagen, thus forming an immune privilege area and preventing the lymphocytes and APCs from entering the tumor area.20
Appropriate selection and construction of the nanoparticle structure in the aspects of size, shape, coated ligands, loading method, zeta potential, hydrophilicity, elasticity and biocompatibility lead to suitable nano-vehicles for immunotherapeutic molecules, which generally ought to have a prolonged biological half-life period, protect payloads during circulation, penetrate through barriers or have target effects, controllably release payloads under specific microenvironments, and have low biotoxicity. Nanoparticles less than 5 nm in diameter tend to be excreted through renal filtration, and nanoparticles with diameter larger than 200 nm could be rapidly eliminated in spleen due to the size of inter-endothelial slits;30 thus the diameter in the range from 5 to 200 nm is the optimal size for nanoparticles. The shape of nanoparticles should also be elaborated as different shapes process different characteristics. For instance, worm-like nanoparticles exhibit preferable fluid dynamics compared with rod-, fingerprint-shaped or spherical nanoparticles;31 spherical nanoparticles are less likely to be accumulated in spleen, but flat cylindrical nanoparticles had the most retention in the liver, lung and spleen organs.32 Nanoparticles with slight negative charge had significantly lower retention in organs and had a prolonged circulation half-lifetime, but positive surface charge could assist the adherence to the anionic cellular membrane and is more advantageous in inducing cellular internalization.33,34 Structural stability in blood circulation is another critical aspect, which is needed to exercise caution especially for nanoparticles like polymeric micelles, as they are often not able to maintain the structural integrity well in the rapid bloodstream and will cause declines in delivery efficiency.35 Special designs including intensified structure stability or the environment-triggered releasing strategy are needed for these nanoparticles to achieve preferable transportation ability. Collectively, appropriate design of nanoparticles in accordance with the experimental purposes facilitates in optimizing the delivery efficiency and therapeutic effects of payloads.
Nanoparticles have been widely researched to be incorporated into tumor immunotherapy in recent years based on their inherent biophysical properties and multitudinous modifying potential, with tremendous progress made in preclinical and clinical trials. However, there are few reviews summarizing the advances in the fast-updating research area. In this review, we summarized and discussed the current status of nanoparticle-enhanced cancer immunotherapy strategies in the aspects of intensified delivery of tumor vaccines and immune adjuvants, ICI vehicles, targeting capacity to tumor-draining lymph nodes and immune cells, triggered releasing and regulating specific tumor microenvironments, and adoptive cell therapy enhancement effects.
Table 1 summarizes the basic characteristics of recent studies focusing on the antitumor vaccine delivery by nanoparticles, and the therapeutic effects are listed in Table 2.38–51 By the form of payloads, it could be classified into three categories: tumor specific antigen delivery, immune bio-adjuvant delivery and co-delivery of antigens and adjuvants. In order to generate antitumor immunity in experiments, ovalbumin (OVA) was mostly selected as the model tumor antigen due to its exogeneity, easy feasibility and suitable immunogenicity. OVA was conjugated as a payload to various types of nanoparticles, including silica nanoparticles,38 liposomes,42,47,49 gold nanoparticles,41 alginate nanoparticles43 and polymeric nanoparticles,46 and injected into mice bearing OVA-expressing melanoma, lymphoma or thymoma-bearing animal models. Compared with single delivery of antigens, conjugated delivery of antigen–nanoparticle compounds induced significantly stronger antigen-specific antibody responses and CD8+ cytotoxic T lymphocyte responses accompanied by increased levels of antigen-specific IgG, interferon-γ and specific types of interleukins, inhibiting tumor growth and prolonging survival of mice (Table 2). On the other hand, delivery of multiple antigens instead of only single OVA may further enhance the anti-tumor immunoreaction. Zhang et al. conjugated two tumor specific peptides and one immunoadjuvant with layered double hydroxide nanoparticles and found a significantly stronger inhibition effect to melanoma compared with single antigen-delivering nanoparticles.40
Studies | Nanoparticles | Size | Shape | Balanced surface charge | Payload | Experimental subject | Tumor model |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Abbreviations: CpG, cytosine phosphorothioste-guanine; DC, dendritic cell; LCP, lipid–calcium–phosphate; MPLA, monophosphoryl lipid A; ODN, oligodeoxynucleotide; PLGA, poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid); PLP, proteolipid peptides; PTX, paclitaxel; TMC, trimethylchitosan; TLR, toll-like receptor; TRX, 3,5-didodecyloxybenzamidine. | |||||||
Lu et al.38 | Organosilica NP | 200 nm | Sphere | Not given | Encapsulated: OVA and TLR agonist (CpG) | C57BL/6 mice | Murine B16-OVA melanoma |
Yan et al.39 | Layered double hydroxide NP and nanosheet | 109.2 nm (NP), 176.8 nm (nanosheet) | Flat cylindrical and sheet | Not given | Coated: OVA and CpG | C57BL/6 mice | Murine E.G7-OVA T-lymphoma |
Zhang et al.40 | Layered double hydroxide NP | 108.4 nm | Flat cylindrical | +39.0 mV | Coated: neo-epitopes and CpG | C57BL/6 mice | Murine B16F10 melanoma |
Yata et al.41 | Gold NP | 50 nm | Not given | Not given | Coated: CpG DNA | C57BL/6 mice | Murine E.G7-OVA T-lymphoma |
Thomas et al.42 | Liposome | 81–103/121–160 nm | Sphere | −6 to −8/+4–+6 mV | Coated: OVA | BALB/c, C57BL/6 mice | N/A |
Zhang et al. (2)43 | Alginate NP | 310 nm | Sphere | −45.6 mV | Coated: OVA | BALB/c, C57BL/6 mice | Murine E.G7-OVA T-lymphoma |
Sokolova et al.44 | LCP | 275 nm | Sphere | +20 mV | Coated: TRL ligand | BALB/c, C57BL/6 mice | N/A |
Liu et al.45 | LCP | 58 nm | Sphere | +38 mV | Encapsulated: anti-CTLA-4 antibody and mRNA encoding tumor antigen MUC | BALB/c mice | Murine TNBC 4 T1 mammary carcinoma |
Pearson et al.46 | PLGA | 72.2–656 nm | Sphere | −56.0 to −31.5 mV | Coated/encapsulated: OVA and PLP | SJL/J and C57BL/6 mice | N/A |
Verbeke et al.47 | Cationic liposome | 160 nm | Sphere | +50 mV | Encapsulated: MPLA and mRNA encoding OVA | C57BL/6 mice | N/A |
Takahashi et al.48 | Carbonate apatite NP | 30–40 nm | Sphere | Not given | Encapsulated: CpG and ODN | C57BL/6 mice | N/A |
Yoshizaki et al.49 | Cationic liposome | 88–110 nm | Sphere | −65 to −60/−11 to −19 mV | Coated: TRX, CpG DNA; Encapsulated: OVA, CpG DNA | C57BL/6 mice | Murine E.G7-OVA T-lymphoma |
Liang et al.50 | Liposome | 80–100 nm | Sphere | Not given | Encapsulated: mRNA encoding hemagglutinin | Not given | N/A |
Xu et al.51 | TMC complex | 150 nm | Sphere | +28 mV | Encapsulated: PTX and DNA encoding (GM-CSF)-Fc | BALB/c and C57BL/6 mice | HeLa and B16 melanoma cells |
Studies | Therapeutic effects |
---|---|
Abbreviations: APC, antigen presenting cell; CTL, cytotoxic T lymphocytes; DC, dendritic cell; LDH, layered double hydroxide; NPs, nanoparticles; OVA, ovalbumin; Tregs, regulatory T cells. | |
Lu et al.38 | • APC's cellular uptake of both OVA and CpG was significantly enhanced in organosilica NP-encapsulated form than the free form |
• OVA- and CpG-organosilica NP induced cellular endosome escape for antigen cross-presentation | |
• OVA- and CpG-organosilica NP decreased the GSH level and increased the ROS level in vitro and in vivo, facilitating CTL proliferation, reducing tumor growth and prolonged survival in the melanoma mice model | |
Yan et al.39 | • Nanomaterials induced much stronger humoral and cell-medicated immune responses, evidenced by higher levels of IgG1, IgG2a and interferon-γ |
• LDH nanosheets showed higher activity to promote specific antibody response than LDH NPs but with a similar cell mediated immune response | |
• Nanomaterials inhibited tumor growth and prolonged survival in vivo | |
Zhang et al.40 | • LDH-NP induced significantly higher CTL activity and inhibited melanoma growth in vivo |
Yata et al.41 | • Gold NPs increased tumor-associated antigen-specific IgG and interferon-γ expression in vivo |
• Gold NPs significantly delayed tumor growth and extended the survival of mice | |
Thomas et al.42 | • Mice immunized with OVA delivered by NPs produced much higher antibody titers than those without NPs |
• 80 nm anionic nanoliposome is the most efficient type in eliciting a higher humoral and cellular immune response | |
Zhang et al. (2)43 | • Alginate NPs facilitated OVA uptake and its cytosolic release in DC, and also enhanced the expression of surface co-stimulatory molecules of the DC |
• Alginate NPs enhanced in vivo trafficking of OVA to draining lymph nodes and strengthened cross presentation of OVA to T cell hybridoma | |
• Alginate NPs induced a major CTL response and the inhibition of tumor growth in vivo | |
Sokolova et al.44 | • NP with Anti-146 could target the liver by intravenous injection |
• The expression of IFN-α/β, TNF-α, IL-6 and IP-10 in hepatocytes, NPCs and LSECs was significantly increased by NP | |
Liu et al.45 | • Nanoliposome targeted to mannose receptors on DCs, led to tumor antigen expression and induced a strong, antigen-specific CTL response against tumor cells |
• Co-encapsulated anti-CTLA-4 antibody significantly enhanced the anti-tumor immune response compared to the mRNA alone-NPs | |
Pearson et al.46 | • Immune cells’ cellular interaction induced by the 80 nm PLGA NP was significantly lower than the 400 nm PLGA NP |
• CD25 expression on T cells was particle size independent | |
• Induction of Tregs was particle size and concentration dependent | |
Verbeke et al.47 | • Liposome induced high antigen expression and effective antigen-specific T cell immunity in vivo without provoking a type I IFN response |
Takahashi et al.48 | • CA nanoparticles containing CpG ODNs induced significant IFN-α production by mouse dendritic cells and human peripheral blood mononuclear cells in vitro |
• NP enhanced the production of interleukin-12 and IFN-γ | |
• Treatment with NP resulted in higher cytokine production in draining lymph nodes, and induced higher antigen-specific antibody responses and CD8+ cytotoxic T lymphocyte responses in vivo in an interleukin-12- and type-I IFN-dependent manner | |
Yoshizaki et al.49 | • Liposome promoted cytokine production from DCs and expression of co-stimulatory molecules in vitro |
• Liposome induced antigen-specific immune responses, inhibited tumor growth and prolonged survival in vivo | |
Liang et al.50 | • Nanoliposome induced rapid and local infiltration of neutrophils, monocytes and DCs to the site of administration and draining lymph nodes |
• APCs efficiently internalized nanoliposomes, translated the encapsulated mRNA and upregulated key co-stimulatory receptors including CD80 and CD86 | |
• Nanoliposome resulted in priming of H10-specific CD4+ T cells exclusively in draining lymph nodes, and induced type-1 IFN-polarized innate immune response | |
Xu et al.51 | • Nano-complex enhanced intracellular uptake of DCs, upregulated the costimulatory molecules of CD80 and CD86, promoted the proliferation of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells, and reduced the generation of immunosuppressive FoxP3+ Treg cells |
• Nano-complex has a synergistic effect on the maturation and function of DCs, increased immune stimulation and reduced immune escape, inhibited tumor growth and prolonged survival in vivo |
Genetic antigens could also be the payload of nanoparticles to stimulate immunity against cancer. After delivered intracellularly, tumor specific antigens or immune adjuvants encoded by the genetic vaccine could be formed through transcription and translation, and continuously stimulate the immune system to generate long-term immunity49 (Fig. 2). They also have the advantages of easy manufacture, preserving, strong cellular immunity stimulation, being cross-immunity inducing and promising immunogenicity. Recent studies showed efficiency of the anti-tumor genetic vaccines in inducing both the antigen-specific cytotoxic T-lymphocyte response, and humoral immune response and tumor suppression effects.41,45,47,49,50 However, their safety concerns should still be noted for the possibility of genomic instability caused by the integration into the genome of the host cell, and the immunologic tolerance of the immune system after long-term overexpression of the encoded antigens.
Fig. 2 Genetic tumor nanovaccine enhanced immunotherapy. (A) Synthesis process and working mechanism of the nanoliposome. (B) Enhanced secretion of TNF-α and IL-12 after treatment. (C) Increased MHC-I, MHC-II and CD80 expression after treatment. (D) In vivo anti-tumor effects of the genetic liposome nanovaccine. Reprinted from ref. 49, Copyright (2017), with permission from Elsevier. |
Bio-adjuvants of cancer vaccine are usually ligands to pattern recognition receptors, including the toll-like receptor (TLR), C-type lectin receptor, NOD-like receptor and RIG-like receptor, which could assist the innate immune response, facilitate polarization of naive T lymphocytes to T helper cells, and accordingly induce the adaptive immunity.52–54 TCR agonists are the most studied immune adjuvant integrated into nanoparticles, and they showed significantly higher immune activation effects than the free soluble form. The co-delivery of adjuvants with antigens within the same nano-system achieved even better results, mainly through mechanisms of enhancing the immunogenicity of weak antigens, reducing the required amount of antigen for effective immune stimulation, and preserving payloads from biolysis. Among the studies, several types of TLR agonists (for example, CpG (TLR9 agonist) and MPLA (TLR4 agonist)) were usually simultaneously conjugated to nanoparticles accompanied by another TAA to realize stronger effects, as multiple TLRs were generally required to be stimulated by pathogens to further increase the levels of inflammatory chemokines and cytokines.55 In addition, the co-delivery of immune bio-adjuvants with immunosuppressive pathway inhibitors could also significantly suppress the proliferation of immunosuppressive cells and synergistically enhance the tumor-specific cellular immune response56 (Fig. 3).
Fig. 3 Tumor-specific cellular immune response induced by tumor nanovaccine co-delivering the bio-adjuvant and immunosuppressive pathway inhibitor. (A) Synthesis and working mechanism of the co-delivery nanovaccine. (B) Enhanced cellular uptake and intracellular localization of siRNA and tumor antigen (OVA) in mouse bone marrow dendritic cells. (C) Increased tumor antigen-specific CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell proliferation, IFN-γ production and CTL response by the nanovaccine. (D) The anti-tumor effects of the co-delivery nanovaccine and survival curves of tumor-bearing mice. Reprinted from ref. 56, Copyright (2015), with permission from Elsevier. |
The whole cell antitumor vaccine is mainly generated from two sources, whole tumor cell membrane or tumor cell lysates. Different from individual tumor specific antigens, the whole cell antitumor vaccine contains a full range of epitopes and could induce a multivalent immune response.57,58 Several groups fabricated core–shell PLGA nanostructures coated with cancer cell membrane antigens, and formed a robust platform towards multi-antigenic immune responses. For instance, Yang et al. loaded PLGA nanoparticles with a TLR7 agonist and an immunomodulator imiquimod, and then coated the compound with a cancer cell membrane to form an immune-adjuvant whole cell antitumor nanovaccine. In combination with checkpoint blockade therapy, the nanovaccine significantly activated anti-tumor immune cells and exhibited outstanding therapeutic efficacy against established tumor lesions.59 Lysates of resected tumor tissues were also conjugated to nanoparticles with immune adjuvants in other studies to direct immune responses against cancer.60,61 In addition, clay nanoparticles with antigens loaded were found to be able to form subcutaneous nodules with a loose structure at the site of injection, which acted as a depot for sustained antigen release and immune cell recruit, and induced continuous immune stimulation and memory T-cell proliferation for up to 35 days.62 Another strategy to develop a whole cell antitumor vaccine by nanoparticles is to generate the TAAs in situ, which means the generation of tumor cell lysates from damaged or dying cancer cells. It has been proved that the TAAs could be generated in situ after chemotherapy63 or radiotherapy,64 and more importantly, combined with photothermal therapy (PTT) or photodynamic therapy (PDT), specific nanoparticle platforms developed by Chen65 and Xu et al.66 were shown to have the ability to significantly further enhance the therapeutic efficacy of PTT and PDT, and reinforce tumor cell destruction and the subsequent TAA generation in situ, thus inducing strong antitumor immunity to inhibit the development of original and metastatic tumor lesions.
Among the studies developing nanoparticles for the delivery of immune checkpoint inhibitors, although a variance in the nanoparticle types and sizes existed, the conjugation could enhance the immune response against tumors and decrease side effects of immune checkpoint inhibitors,72–78 which is mainly due to the accumulation of nanoparticles and the sustained release of inhibitors in the tumor tissue, as proven by Meir et al. that the amount of inhibitor accumulation within tumor tissues was linearly correlated with the intensity of the immune response against cancer.79 Furthermore, as the anti-PD-L1 and anti-CTLA4 treatments have been proven to have a synergistic treatment effect due to the different mechanisms, Chae et al. constructed a nano-system delivering both the inhibitors, and found a significantly slower tumor growth rate and longer survival of mice in the combined treatment group than either of the individual drug groups.80
In addition, there are studies combining the nanoparticle conjugated-immune checkpoint inhibitors with other treatment methods to further intensify therapeutic effects. Kuai et al. integrated lipid-doxorubicin (DOX) and anti-PD-1 antibody with synthetic high-density lipoprotein (sHDL) to form pH-responsive nanoparticles.81 The prolonged circulation enables adequate intratumoral delivery, followed by internalization by tumor cells and pH-related release of payloads in the endosomes and lysosomes. Released DOX killed tumor cells, and induced immunogenic cell death and release of danger signals, recruiting APCs to phagocytose the immunogenically dying tumor cells. The immune response would be further enhanced accompanied by the anti-PD-1 antibodies, leading to elimination of tumors and prevention of tumor relapse. As a result, the sHDL-DOX + anti-PD-1 nanoparticles significantly induced an antigen-specific cytotoxic T-cell response, suppressed tumor growth and prolonged survival than the free DOX + anti-PD-1 treatment or the single anti-PD-1 treatment (Fig. 4). Similar results were also found by Wang et al. when PD-L1 siRNA coated nanoparticles were integrated with a photosensitizer for photodynamic therapy that the combined nanosystem efficiently stimulated the immune response and silenced immune resistance, inhibiting tumor growth and preventing recurrence.82
Fig. 4 Elimination of tumors by chemoimmunotherapy with immune checkpoint inhibitor-conjugated nanoparticles. (A) Schematic of immune checkpoint inhibitor-combined nanoparticles for chemo-immunotherapy. (B) Percentage of tumor antigen-specific CD8+ T cells after treatment and the corresponding scatterplots. (C) Whole-animal in vivo imaging of tumors after treatment and quantification of the bioluminescence signal. (D) Tumor growth and survival curves after treatment. Reprinted from ref. 81, © The Authors, some rights reserved; exclusive licensee American Association for the Advancement of Science. Distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution NonCommercial License 4.0 (CC BY-NC), http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/. |
Another established negative feedback protein that suppresses the immune response and assists tumor cell proliferation is indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO), which mediates the degradation of tryptophan to kynurenine and other metabolites, thus leading to intracellular accumulation, inducing cell cycle arrest and death of effector T lymphocytes, and promoting regulatory T cell proliferation with the immunosuppressive effects.83,84 Sun et al. coated the IDO inhibitor NLG919 and DOX with a redox-responsive immunostimulatory polymeric prodrug carrier. The nanosystem generated greater accumulation of NLG and DOX in tumor tissue than other organs, promoted apoptosis of breast and prostate cancer cells, and formed more significant immunoactivation effects compared with free DOX, liposomal DOX or free NLG groups.85 Other similar studies are also consistent with the reported results.86,87
Fig. 5 Tumor draining lymph node (TDLN) targeted nanoparticles boost the tumor-specific T-lymphocyte response, natural killer cells’ immune stimulation and effector memory T cells’ proliferation. (A) Structure of the TDLN targeted nanoparticle that enables co-delivery of three elements including tumor cell membrane proteins, adjuvant CpG and an a-helix peptide modified HSP70p. (B) Prolonged antigen delivery in TDLNs and multi-epitope T cells priming in vivo: a. fluorescence showing nanoparticle accumulation in the TDLNs and the corresponding fluorescence intensity; b. quantitative analysis of the frequency of the nanoparticle positive CD8α+ T cells in the TDLNs after treatment. (C) The nanoparticle activated antigen-specific CD8+ T cells, NKG2D+ NK cells, and induced effector memory T cell proliferation in vivo. (D) Elimination of primary and secondary tumors by the nanoparticle. Reprinted from ref. 94, Copyright (2018), with permission from Elsevier. |
Besides the TDLN, nanoparticles are also designed to target different types of immune cells, among which the DC is the most targeted cell because of its prominent role in antigen processing and presentation. The DC target is implemented by integrating ligands that combine with the membrane receptors on DCs, including the mannose, CD40, CD11c, DEC205 and DC-SIGN receptors. Studies found that the DC-targeted nanosystem could reinforce the endocytosis of DCs compared with the free form without nanoparticles.96–100 Wang et al. conjugated mannose on the lipid–calcium–phosphate nanoparticles and found improved DC engulfment in the targeting-delivered group.101 As a result, the co-encapsulated PD-L1 siRNA resulted in down-regulation of PD-L1 in DCs that presented tumor antigens, further significantly prompted T cell activation and proliferation, and exhibited profound inhibitory effects on tumor growth and metastasis. Similar results were reported in another study by Liu et al.102 In addition, targeting different molecules on the DC seemed to have different DC stimulation efficacy. Cruz et al. observed a small but significantly enhanced internalization of CD40-targeted nanoparticles in comparison with CD11c or DEC-205 targeted nanoparticles; however, all three targeted methods showed similar capacity to prime cytotoxic T-lymphocytes and subsequently induced tumor cell lysis.103 Different subsets of DCs had diverse specific functions and antigen presentation abilities based on types of immune responses and pathogens; however, no studies have been carried out concerning the immunity stimulation effects achieved by nanoparticles targeting the different subsets of DCs.
T-lymphocytes could also be targeted by the nanoparticles. Schmid et al. targeted CD8+ T-lymphocytes using PD-1 antibody after removing the Fc fragments and combining with PLGA nanoparticles.104 Meanwhile, the inhibitor of TGF-β which assists in immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment maintenance and immune adjuvants TLR7/8 agonists were also coated by the nanoparticle. The PD-1 positive T-lymphocytes were successfully targeted in blood and tumor tissue, and the TGF-β inhibitors and TLR7/8 agonists enhanced the immune responses, sensitized tumors to subsequent anti-PD-1 treatment and raised the proportion of tumor-infiltrating CD8+ T-lymphocytes, converting a “cold” tumor into a “hot” tumor, and extended the survival of mice in comparison with non-targeting compounds. In addition, they also found that by loading the drugs into targeted particles, the dose required decreased to less than one-tenth of the standard dose, thus mitigating potential toxicity.
He et al. developed a macrophage dual-targeted CpG-loading nanoparticle realized by mannosylated carboxymethyl chitosan (MCMC) and hyaluronan (HA), which resulted in a considerable shift of macrophages to activated M1 types and a significantly enhanced secretion of proinflammotory cytokines.105 Besides, the nanosystem also activated NF-κB and phosphoinositide 3-kinase/Akt signal pathways and induced Fas/FasL-mediated apoptosis in breast cancer models (Fig. 6). Cross-linking of B-lymphocyte receptors is the initiation of B-cell proliferation and differentiation to plasma cells secreting specific antibodies. In another study, biodegradable calcium phosphate nanoparticles decorated with model antigen hen egg lysozyme were preferentially bound and internalized by the tumor antigen specific B-lymphocytes, subsequently enhanced the surface expression of B-cell activation markers, and induced high humoral immunity, which was found to be approximately 100-fold more efficient in the activation of B-cells than the soluble form of tumor antigens.106
Fig. 6 Macrophage dual-targeted nanoparticle for overcoming cancer-associated immunosuppression. (A) Structure of the dual-targeting delivery system inducing immunological stimulation in macrophages. (B) Flow cytometry showing the shift of the macrophage to activated M1 type that marked by CD80 (a. without treatment, and treated by b. naked nanoparticle, c. nontargeting system, d. mono-targeting system with HA, e. mono-targeting system with MCMC, and f. dual-targeting system with HA and MCMC). (C) Enhanced cytokine secretion of the macrophage after being treated. (D) Western blot analysis showing activated NF-κB, PI3 K/Akt and Fas/FasL signaling pathways after treatment (a. without treatment, b. treated by naked nanoparticles, and c. treated by the dual-targeting system). Reprinted with permission from ref. 105. Copyright (2017) American Chemical Society. |
Hypoxia was a commonly utilized tumor-specific condition for nanoparticle design with hypoxia-responsive chemical constructs coated, as the hypoxia is tightly associated with the immune suppressive tumor microenvironment and it is also a rare condition in normal tissues.113–115 The hypoxia environment could induce the polarization of macrophages from the immunosupportive M1 type to immunosuppressive M2 type, and was also responsible for recruitment of abundant regulatory T cells and release of immunosuppressive cytokines.116,117 Im et al. developed a photodynamic agent Chlorin e6 (Ce6)-loaded mesoporous silica nanoparticle with azobenzene used as the hypoxia-sensitive feasible cross-linker, which is also coated with the CpG/GC complex as the immune adjuvants.118 When the nanoparticles reached a hypoxic region within tumor tissue, the azobenzene cross-linkers were cleaved, and the silica core and the CpG/GC complex were released, leading to delivery of CpG for DC engulfment and activation. The authors also generate photodynamic therapy to induce both tumor cell death and recruit DCs to facilitate the release of tumor associated antigens and the uptake of DCs (Fig. 7). The nanoparticles combined with photodynamic therapy significantly enhanced the anti-tumor immune response and inhibited tumor growth in vivo. Yang et al. produced hollow manganese dioxide nanoparticles coated with PEG, Ce6 and DOX, which could be dissociated under the reduced pH microenvironment, hence releasing therapeutic drugs and meanwhile causing degradation of endogenous hydrogen peroxide to relieve intratumoral hypoxia.119 A remarkable synergistic effect of the nanoparticle with photodynamic therapy was achieved through intensifying the anti-tumor immune responses. Moreover, the additional combination of the therapy with immune checkpoint inhibitors led to the ablation of distant tumor metastasis.
Fig. 7 Hypoxia microenvironment-triggered transforming nanoparticles for cancer immunotherapy via photodynamically enhanced antigen presentation. (A) Schematic illustration of the working mechanism of the hypoxia-triggered transforming nanoparticle combined with photodynamic therapy. (B) Photoresponsive generation of singlet oxygen and the release profile of tumor proteins. (C) Hypoxia-responsive internalization of the nanoparticles into cells under hypoxic or normoxic conditions and the corresponding fluorescence intensity. (D) In vivo inhibition of tumor growth by the nanosystem and the survival curves. Reprinted with permission from ref. 118. Copyright (2019) American Chemical Society. |
The abnormal tumor vasculature featuring a heterogeneous vessel diameter, tortuosity and distribution, and insufficient blood and oxygen supply is closely correlated with hypoxia, reduced pH and immune suppressive features within the tumor microenvironment.120 As a result, normalization of tumor vasculature could be a way to enhance anti-tumor immunity.121 Accompanied by oral treatment of Erlotinib, an inhibitor of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), Chen et al. found that the tumor uptake of immunostimulatory drug-loaded nanoparticles was significantly increased, and the combined therapy dramatically relieved the hypoxia status and altered the immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment into immunosupportive in three types of tumor models.122 The combined treatment also increased the tumor retention of anti-PD-L1 antibody, thus further inhibiting tumor growth and enhancing the treatment efficacy of anti-PD-L1 immunotherapy. On the other hand, the inhibition of copper trafficking could also have antiangiogenesis effects, as copper was required for the secretion of several angiogenic factors and stimulation of endothelial cell proliferation.123,124 Zhou et al. used a copper chelating coil-comb block copolymer, which has strong copper-chelating ability, to compose nanoparticles and conjugated it with TLR7/8 agonists and an immunomodulator Resiquimod.125 The nanoparticle exhibited accelerated releases in a reduced pH tumor microenvironment, displayed targeting ability and dramatically suppressed tumor growth in primary breast tumor and lung metastasis lesions, demonstrating considerable anti-tumor immune enhancement effects.
The relevant microenvironmental characteristics to differentiate malignancy from normal tissues also included specific enzymes such as matrix metalloproteinase (MMP), which functioned in degrading the extracellular matrix and assisted in carcinogenesis, tumor progression and metastasis, and its level is also found to be proportional to the malignancy of cancer.126–128 As a result, MMPs were harnessed as the key to trigger fragmentation of nanostructures and the release of payloads. Shin et al. used a MMP9-cleabable linker to trigger the detachment of the PEG corona in the tumor tissue, and this method significantly enhanced CD44 receptor-mediated endocytosis of nanoparticles, facilitated antigen presentation and inhibited tumor growth129 (Fig. 8). In another study, CpG DNA and anti-PD1 antibody were controllably released from nanoparticles in tumor tissue by the MMP9-dissociation method, and subsequently considerable immune responses were induced, and the risk of tumor relapse and metastasis after primary tumor resection was significantly reduced.130
Fig. 8 MMP9 responsive nanoparticle in enhancing cancer immunotherapy. (A) Schematic illustration depicting the working mechanism of the MMP9 responsive polymeric nanoparticle. (B) MMP9 responsive polymeric nanoparticle effectively accumulated in tumor tissue after systemic administration. (C) In vivo OVA antigen presentation in tumor cells after nanoparticle treatment. (D) In vivo therapeutic efficacy of the nanoparticle in tumor bearing mice. Reprinted from ref. 129, Copyright (2017), with permission from Elsevier. |
In addition, the redox-sensitive-based delivery strategy was often utilized as an effective way for controlled release of drugs into the tumor microenvironment. Generally, the nanoparticles contained redox-responsive disulfide bonds that could be degraded by intracellular glutathione. Along with reduction of the disulfide bonds, antigens could be released from the nanoparticle carrier and be cross-presented to induce cellular immunity.131,132 Xu et al. developed a redox-responsive nanoparticle platform and found that it had satisfactory features of long blood circulation, high tumor accumulation, fast payload release, and effective therapeutic effects.133 Wang et al. combined cell-penetrating peptides and redox-responsive disulfide bond cross-linking to design peptide carriers to form antigen delivery nanoparticles.134 The results showed that the redox-responsive nanoparticles could significantly induce the antigen-specific immune response by significantly increasing IgG titer and levels of cytokines including INF-γ, IL-12, IL-4, and IL-10, stimulating splenocyte proliferation and APC maturation, and could also enhance the immune memory function.
Fig. 9 Nanostructured polyporous scaffold implants enhanced the efficacy of adoptive T-cell therapy. (A and B) Schematic diagram of the T cell-loaded scaffold surgically situated at a tumor site. Stimulatory microspheres incorporated into the device triggered cell expansion and promoted their egress into surrounding tissue. (C) Histological analysis of the scaffold and surrounding tissue 3 days after tumor-specific T cells (orange) were embedded in the scaffold (purple) and implanted into the tumor resection cavity. (D) Serial in vivo bioluminescence imaging of tumors. (E) Survival curves of tumor bearing mice following T-cell adoptive therapy. (F) In vivo bioluminescent imaging of T cells expressing luciferase. (G) Luciferase signal intensities after T-cell transfer, every line represented one animal and each dot reflected the whole animal photon count. Reprinted with permission from Springer Nature: Nature Biotechnology, ref. 141, Copyright (2014). |
Nanoparticles could also act on the ex vivo T-cell proliferation to the required quality, and reduce the time interval between cell acquirement and infusion. Integrin of T-lymphocytes played a crucial role in sustaining the immunological synapse with APCs through its binding to intercellular adhesion molecule-1, and the formation of immunological synapse led to reorganization of the cytoskeleton, which facilitated clustering and prevented migration of T-cells.142–144 Guasch et al. created a nanoparticle that cross-linked with peptides derived from fibronectin, an integrin signaling activator, and found that it was significantly more efficient in stimulating T-cell proliferation and increasing the expansion rate compared with nonfunctionalized nanoparticles.145 Perica et al. integrated paramagnetic iron-dextran nanoparticles with the MHC-Ig dimer as signal 1 and CD28 antibody as signal 2 to form an artificial APC.146 The nano-artificial APCs could selectively bind to antigen-specific T-lymphocyte rare naive precursors, and be retained in a magnetic column, thus achieving cell enrichment, followed by activation of the selected T-cells leading to rapid proliferation and expansion. The enrichment and expansion processes resulted in greater than 1000-fold proliferation of mouse and human antigen-specific T-lymphocytes in one week. The nano-artificial APCs could not only enhance T-cell proliferation in vivo culture but also after adoptive transfer, leading to a robust T-cell response (Fig. 10).
Fig. 10 Enrichment and expansion with nano-artificial APCs for adoptive cell immunotherapy. (A) Nano-artificial APCs are synthesized by coupling the MHC-Ig dimer (signal 1) and anti-CD28 antibody (signal 2) to a 50–100 nm iron-dextran nanoparticle. (B) Schematic of magnetic enrichment. Antigen-specific CD8+ T cells (blue) bound to the nano-artificial APC are retained in a magnetic column in the enrichment step, while non-cognate (orange) cells are less likely to bind. Enriched T cells are then activated by the nano-artificial APC and proliferate in the expansion step. (C) Nano-artificial APC enriched and expanded lymphocytes inhibited melanoma growth after adoptive transfer. (D) Enrichment and expansion with the nano-artificial APC functionalized with human HLA-A2 and induced robust expansion against the tumor antigens. Reprinted with permission from ref. 146. Copyright (2015) American Chemical Society. |
Despite the impressive benefits of nanoparticles in cancer immunotherapy, there are still challenges that need to be treated with caution and investigated in future studies. First, the delivery ability of nanoparticles to the intended tissues or organs still needs to be strengthened. Currently, nanoparticles can only deliver a small portion of the administered payloads to the intended locations even with targeted ligands coated, which leads to the loss of delivered drugs and systemic cytotoxicity due to normal cell uptake of the nanoparticles. According to the study of Harrington et al. which included 17 patients with different types of locally advanced cancers, only less than 4% of the total administered dose could be accumulated in tumor tissues using pegylated liposome as the delivery method.28 In addition, considerable heterogeneity of uptake both between different tumor types and between different patients with the same tumor type was also observed, mainly caused by the various tumor vascular conditions.28 Similarly, because of the poor vascularization, nanoparticle accumulation is often insufficient in small metastatic lesions and the core of large tumors where usually exists risky dormant cancer cells. Other nanoparticles taken up by normal cells can cause toxicity including oxidative stress, pulmonary inflammation, and dysfunction of cells and organs through mechanisms of redox cycling, free radical formation and hydrophobic interaction.147,148
For the nanoparticles delivering payloads to the immune organs and cells, as they need to be transported in blood circulation and lymph vessels before reaching the targeted sites, the structural and colloidal stability is crucial to guarantee their final drainage into the immune organs and present payloads to immune cells.40 Unstable nanoparticles may form micrometer-sized aggregates that could plug the capillary bed of distal organs and cause serious complications to patients. Another challenge is how to efficiently regulate components within the whole immune system by the nanoparticles to optimize the enhancement effects on anti-tumor immunity. The innate and adaptive immune system works in a network, but currently, little is known about how the other immune components in the immune network are affected to influence the whole anti-tumor immunity when the intended component is regulated by the administered nanoparticles. Future efforts are still needed to investigate the inter-regulation mechanisms of immune components to maximize treatment effects of the nanoparticles.
Potential immunogenicity of nanoparticles is another crucial concern towards progress in clinical translations. In fact, the utilization of nanoparticles in cancer immunotherapy is based on the immunogenicity or the immune adjuvant effects of nanoparticles or the attached peptides, proteins or antibody fragments, but it could be detrimental if the immune response against un-intended components is activated. Nanoparticles can be antigenic themselves, and if the nanoparticles are recognized as foreign substances and opsonized by plasma protein, the complement pathway will be activated, resulting in rapid phagocytosis and clearance in liver and spleen. Complete activation of the immune response against nanoparticles may lead to serious complications including allergic reactions, hemolysis, thrombogenesis, and even disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC).149,150 More importantly, when nanoparticles are applied for enhancing anti-tumor immunity, immune checkpoint inhibitors are often conjugated to the nanoparticles or systematically administered to form syncretistic treatment effects. However, one major risk of the immune checkpoint inhibitors is that the drugs can induce serious autoimmune diseases. As a consequence, the simultaneously administered nanoparticles for future clinical translations should be developed in weak antigenicity with the use of a strictly controlled dose, and the patients should be observed with caution as they are theoretically at higher risk of complications.
Collectively, clinical application of the nanoparticles combined with immunotherapy needs the optimization of nanostructures to overcome the several existing disadvantages including the insufficient targeted delivery capacity, systemic cytotoxicity due to normal cell's engulfment and the potential immunogenicity, and it will be crucial to ascertain the optimal physical and chemical properties of the nanoparticles in future investigations. It has been shown that the diameter of nanoparticles less than 100 nm displayed the most suitable surface chemistries, which could enable long-distance transportation within immune organs, strengthening internalization by immune cells, but other characteristics including the surface charge, shape, elasticity, hydrophilicity, ligands, and loading methods of encapsulating or conjugating payloads still need to be researched and determined to further improve the pharmacokinetics, toxicity, biocompatibility and biodistribution of the nanoparticles.
Only a small proportion of patients could achieve satisfactory survival after receiving one modality of immunotherapy, and there is a growing common view that combination of tumor vaccines with immune checkpoint inhibitors, adoptive T-cell therapy or tumor microenvironment regulatory treatments could form synergistic effects on inhibiting primary and abscopal tumor lesions. As a consequence, developing pleuripotent nanoparticles that integrate the multiple immunotherapy ingredients with targeted delivering and triggered releasing ability may could potentially attain comprehensive anti-tumor immunity enhancement and improved treatment effects. With further advances of nanotechnology and deeper understanding of interactions between the nanomaterials and immune system, the nanomedicine combined immunotherapy could be further consummated to achieve more effective therapeutic benefits.
Footnote |
† The authors contributed equally to the manuscript. |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2019 |