4.6 Article

Self-driven immune checkpoint blockade and spatiotemporal-sensitive immune response monitoring in acute myeloid leukemia using an all-in-one turn-on bionanoprobe

Journal

JOURNAL OF MATERIALS CHEMISTRY B
Volume 11, Issue 44, Pages 10613-10624

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d3tb01553j

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This article introduces a multifunctional nanoprobe for immune checkpoint blockade and immune response monitoring in acute myeloid leukemia cells. The nanoprobe can trigger ICB therapy and detect immune responses simultaneously, allowing for accurate evaluation of heterogeneous immune responses without additional drug treatment or probe processes.
Immune checkpoint (ICP) blockade (ICB) is one of the most promising immunotherapies for acute myeloid leukemia (AML). However, owing to their heterogeneity, AML cells may cause uncoordinated metabolic fluxes and heterogeneous immune responses, inducing the release of a spatiotemporally sensitive immune response marker. Timely and in situ detection of immune responses in ICB therapy is important for therapeutic strategy adjustment. Herein, we constructed an all-in-one nanoprobe for self-driving ICB and simultaneously detecting an immune response in the same AML cell in vivo, thus enabling accurate evaluation of heterogenetic immune responses in living AML mice without additional drug treatment or probe processes. The nature-inspire polydopamine (PDA) nanoparticles loaded with an ICP blocker were targeted to the leukocyte immunoglobulin like receptor B4 (a new ICP) of AML cells to induce the release of immune response marker granzyme B (GrB). The PDA nanoparticles were additionally paired with carbon-derived graphene quantum dots (GQDs) to construct a full-organic 'turn-on' bionanoprobe that can transfer fluorescence resonance energy for GrB detection. This multifunctional nanoprobe was validated for triggering ICB therapy and monitoring the changes of GrB levels in real-time both in vitro and in vivo. The organic nanoprobe showed excellent permeability and retention in tumor cells and high biocompatibility in vivo. This bionanoprobe orderly interacted with the upstream ICP molecules and downstream signal molecule GrB, thereby achieving in situ immune response signals within the therapeutic efficacy evaluation window. An all-in-one bionanoprobe was developed for self-driven immune checkpoint blockade and spatiotemporal-sensitive immune response monitoring in heterogeneous acute myeloid leukemia cells.

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