4.7 Article

Gene augmented nuclear-targeting sonodynamic therapy via Nrf2 pathway-based redox balance adjustment boosts peptide-based anti-PD-L1 therapy on colorectal cancer

Journal

JOURNAL OF NANOBIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 19, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12951-021-01094-x

Keywords

Nuclear-targeting; Nrf2-siRNA; Sonodynamic therapy; Immune checkpoint blockade therapy; Colorectal cancer

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [82003299]
  2. Program of Science and Technology of Henan Province [212102310863]
  3. Xinxiang Medical University [XYBSKYZZ201716]

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The study investigated a novel treatment strategy, Nrf2-siRNA augmented nuclear-targeting sonodynamic therapy, to efficiently inhibit the progression of colorectal cancer and enhance the efficacy of PD-L1 therapy. Experimental results demonstrated that this treatment could provide a new synergistic strategy for treating tumor growth and metastasis of colorectal cancer by improving the immunosuppressive microenvironment.
Background: Colorectal cancer is known to be resistant to immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) therapy. Sonodynamic therapy (SDT) has been reported to improve the efficacy of immunotherapy by inducing immunogenic cell death (ICD) of cancer. However, the SDT efficacy is extremely limited by Nrf2-based natural redox balance regulation pathway in cancer cells in response to the increased contents of reactive oxygen species (ROS). Nuclear-targeting strategy has shown unique advantages in tumor therapy by directly destroying the DNA. Thus it can be seen that Nrf2-siRNA augmented nuclear-targeting SDT could boost ICB therapy against colorectal cancer. Results: The nuclear-targeting delivery system TIR@siRNA (TIR was the abbreviation of assembled TAT-IR780) with great gene carrier capacity and smaller diameter (< 60 nm) was designed to achieve the gene augmented nuclear-targeting SDT facilitating the anti-PD-L1 (programmed cell death-ligand-1) therapy against colorectal cancer. In CT26 cells, TIR@siRNA successfully delivered IR780 (the fluorescent dye used as sonosensitizer) into cell nucleus and Nrf2-siRNA into cytoplasm. Under US (utrasound) irradiation, TIR@siRNA notably increased the cytotoxicity and apoptosis-inducing activity of SDT through down-regulating the Nrf2, directly damaging the DNA, activating mitochondrial apoptotic pathway while remarkably inducing ICD of CT26 cells. In CT26 tumor-bearing mice, TIR@siRNA mediated gene enhanced nuclear-targeting SDT greatly inhibited tumor growth, noticeably increased the T cell infiltration and boosted (D)PPA-1 peptide-based anti-PD-L1 therapy to ablate the primary CT26 tumors and suppress the intestinal metastases. Conclusions: All results demonstrate that TIR@siRNA under US irradiation can efficiently inhibit the tumor progression toward colorectal CT26 cancer in vitro and in vivo by its mediated gene augmented nuclear-targeting sonodynamic therapy. Through fully relieving the immunosuppressive microenvironment of colorectal cancer by this treatment, this nanoplatform provides a new synergistic strategy for enhancing the anti-PD-L1 therapy to ablate colorectal cancer and inhibit its metastasis.

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