4.8 Article

GSH-Responsive Metal-Organic Framework for Intratumoral Release of NO and IDO Inhibitor to Enhance Antitumor Immunotherapy

Journal

SMALL
Volume 18, Issue 15, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/smll.202107732

Keywords

indoleamine 2; 3-dioxygenase inhibition; immunosuppressive microenvironment; immunotherapy; magnetic resonance imaging; nitric oxide therapy

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51933011, 31971296, 51703257]
  2. Science and Technology Program of Guangzhou [202007020006]

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Immunotherapy has great potential for tumor therapy, but the immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment limits its effectiveness. A multifunctional nanoplatform combining drug delivery and medical imaging can overcome the immunosuppressive microenvironment and improve tumor treatment efficiency.
Immunotherapy brings great benefits for tumor therapy in clinical treatments but encounters the severe challenge of low response rate mainly because of the immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment. Multifunctional nanoplatforms integrating effective drug delivery and medical imaging offer tremendous potential for cancer treatment, which may play a critical role in combinational immunotherapy to overcome the immunosuppressive microenvironment for efficient tumor therapy. Here, a nanodrug (BMS-SNAP-MOF) is prepared using glutathione (GSH)-sensitive metal-organic framework (MOF) to encapsulate an immunosuppressive enzyme indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO) inhibitor BMS-986205, and the nitric oxide (NO) donor s-nitrosothiol groups. The high T1 relaxivity allows magnetic resonance imaging to monitor nanodrug distribution in vivo. After the nanodrug accumulation in tumor tissue via the EPR effect and subsequent internalization into tumor cells, the enriched GSH therein triggers cascade reactions with MOF, which disassembles the nanodrug to rapidly release the IDO-inhibitory BMS-986205 and produces abundant NO. Consequently, the IDO inhibitor and NO synergistically modulate the immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment with increase CD8(+) T cells and reduce Treg cells to result in highly effective immunotherapy. In an animal study, treatment using this theranostic nanodrug achieves obvious regressions of both primary and distant 4T1 tumors, highlighting its application potential in advanced tumor immunotherapy.

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