Despite the tremendous potential of peptide-based cancer vaccines, their efficacy has been limited in humans. Recent innovations in tumor exome sequencing have signaled the new era of personalized immunotherapy with patient-specific neo-antigens, but a general methodology for stimulating strong CD8α+ cytotoxic T-lymphocyte (CTL) responses remains lacking. Here we demonstrate that high density lipoprotein-mimicking nanodiscs coupled with antigen (Ag) peptides and adjuvants can markedly improve Ag/adjuvant co-delivery to lymphoid organs and sustain Ag presentation on dendritic cells. Strikingly, nanodiscs elicited up to 47-fold greater frequencies of neoantigen-specific CTLs than soluble vaccines and even 31-fold greater than perhaps the strongest adjuvant in clinical trials (i.e. CpG in Montanide). Moreover, multi-epitope vaccination generated broad-spectrum T-cell responses that potently inhibited tumor growth. Nanodiscs eliminated established MC-38 and B16F10 tumors when combined with anti-PD-1 and anti-CTLA-4 therapy. These findings represent a new powerful approach for cancer immunotherapy and suggest a general strategy for personalized nanomedicine.
Photothermal therapy (PTT) is a promising cancer treatment modality, but PTT generally requires direct access to the source of light irradiation, thus precluding its utility against disseminated, metastatic tumors. Here, we demonstrate that PTT combined with chemotherapy can trigger potent anti-tumor immunity against disseminated tumors. Specifically, we have developed polydopamine-coated spiky gold nanoparticles as a new photothermal agent with extensive photothermal stability and efficiency. Strikingly, a single round of PTT combined with a sub-therapeutic dose of doxorubicin can elicit robust anti-tumor immune responses and eliminate local as well as untreated, distant tumors in >85% of animals bearing CT26 colon carcinoma. We also demonstrate their therapeutic efficacy against TC-1 submucosa-lung metastasis, a highly aggressive model for advanced head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC). Our study sheds new light on a previously unrecognized, immunological facet of chemo-photothermal therapy and may lead to new therapeutic strategies against advanced cancer.
Subunit vaccination benefits from improved safety over attenuated or inactivated vaccines, but their limited capability to elicit long-lasting, concerted cellular and humoral immune responses is a major challenge. Recent studies have demonstrated that antigen delivery via nanoparticle formulations significantly improve immunogenicity of vaccines due to either intrinsic immunostimulatory properties of the materials or by co-entrapment of molecular adjuvants such as Toll-like receptor agonists. These studies have collectively shown that nanoparticles designed to mimic biophysical and biochemical cues of pathogens offer new exciting opportunities to enhance activation of innate immunity and elicit potent cellular and humoral immunity with minimal cytotoxicity. In this review, we present key research advances that were made within the last 5 years in the field of nanoparticle vaccine delivery systems. In particular, we focus on the impact of biomaterials composition, size, and surface charge of nanoparticles on modulation of particle biodistribution, delivery of antigens and immunostimulatory molecules, trafficking and targeting of antigen presenting cells, and overall immune responses in systemic and mucosal tissues. This review describes recent progresses in the design of nanoparticle vaccine delivery carriers, including liposomes, lipid-based particles, micelles and nanostructures composed of natural or synthetic polymers, and lipid-polymer hybrid nanoparticles.
Despite their potential, conventional whole-cell cancer vaccines prepared by freeze-thawing or irradiation have shown limited therapeutic efficacy in clinical trials. Recent studies have indicated that cancer cells treated with certain chemotherapeutics, such as mitoxantrone, can undergo immunogenic cell death (ICD) and initiate antitumor immune responses. However, it remains unclear how to exploit ICD for cancer immunotherapy. Here, we present a new material-based strategy for converting immunogenically dying tumor cells into a powerful platform for cancer vaccination and demonstrate their therapeutic potential in murine models of melanoma and colon carcinoma. We have generated immunogenically dying tumor cells surface-modified with adjuvant-loaded nanoparticles. Dying tumor cells laden with adjuvant nanodepots efficiently promote activation and antigen cross-presentation by dendritic cells in vitro and elicit robust antigen-specific CD8α+ T-cells in vivo. Furthermore, whole tumor-cell vaccination combined with immune checkpoint blockade leads to complete tumor regression in ~78% of CT26 tumor-bearing mice and establishes long-term immunity against tumor recurrence. Our strategy presented here may open new doors to “personalized” cancer immunotherapy tailored to individual patient’s tumor cells.
Here we report the development of a new cationic liposome-hyaluronic acid (HA) hybrid nanoparticle (NP) system and present our characterization of these NPs as an intranasal vaccine platform using a model antigen and F1-V, a candidate recombinant antigen for Yersinia pestis, the causative agent of plague. Incubation of cationic liposomes composed of DOTAP and DOPE with anionic HA biopolymer led to efficient ionic complexation and formation of homogenous liposome-polymer hybrid NPs, as evidenced by fluorescence resonance energy transfer, dynamic light scattering, and nanoparticle tracking analyses. Incorporation of cationic liposomes with thiolated HA allowed for facile surface decoration of NPs with thiol-PEG, resulting in the formation of DOTAP/HA core-PEG shell nanostructures. These NPs, termed DOTAP-HA NPs, exhibited improved colloidal stability and prolonged antigen release. In addition, cytotoxicity associated with DOTAP liposomes (LC50 ~0.2 mg/ml) was significantly reduced by at least 20-fold with DOTAP-HA NPs (LC50 > 4 mg/ml), as measured with bone marrow dendritic cells (BMDCs). Furthermore, NPs co-loaded with ovalbumin (OVA) and a molecular adjuvant, monophosphoryl lipid A (MPLA) promoted BMDC maturation and upregulation of co-stimulatory markers, including CD40, CD86, and MHC-II, and C57BL/6 mice vaccinated with NPs via intranasal route generated robust OVA-specific CD8+ T cell and antibody responses. Importantly, intranasal vaccination with NPs co-loaded with F1-V and MPLA induced potent humoral immune responses with 11-, 23-, and 15-fold increases in F1-V-specific total IgG, IgG1, and IgG2c titers in immune sera by day 77, respectively, and induced balanced Th1/Th2 humoral immune responses, compared with the lack of sero-conversion in mice immunized with the equivalent doses of soluble F1-V vaccine. Overall, these results suggest that liposome-polymer hybrid NPs may serve as a promising vaccine delivery platform for intranasal vaccination against Y. pestis and other infectious pathogens.
Recent studies have shown that certain combinations of Toll-like receptor (TLR) agonists can induce synergistic immune activation. However, it remains challenging to achieve such robust responses in vivo in a manner that is effective, facile, and amenable for clinical translation. Here, we show that MPLA, a TLR4 agonist, and CpG, a TLR9 agonist, can be efficiently co-loaded into synthetic high-density lipoprotein nanodiscs, forming a potent adjuvant system (ND-MPLA/CpG) that can be readily combined with a variety of subunit antigens, including proteins and peptides. ND-MPLA/CpG significantly enhanced activation of dendritic cells, compared with free dual adjuvants or nanodiscs delivering a single TLR agonist. Importantly, mice immunized with physical mixtures of protein antigens ND-MPLA/CpG generated strong humoral responses, including induction of IgG responses against protein convertase subtilisin/kexin 9 (PCSK9), leading to 17-30% reduction of the total plasma cholesterol levels. Moreover, ND-MPLA/CpG exerted strong anti-tumor efficacy in multiple murine tumor models. Compared with free adjuvants, ND-MPLA/CpG admixed with ovalbumin markedly improved antigen-specific CD8+ T cell responses by 8-fold and promoted regression of B16F10-OVA melanoma (P < 0.0001). Furthermore, ND-MPLA/CpG admixed with E7 peptide antigen elicited ~20% E7-specific CD8+ T cell responses and achieved complete regression of established TC-1 tumors in all treated animals. Taken together, our work highlights the simplicity, versatility, and potency of dual TLR agonist nanodiscs for applications in vaccines and cancer immunotherapy.
Despite the promise and advantages of autologous cancer cell vaccination, it remains challenging to induce potent anti-tumor immune responses with traditional immunization strategies with whole tumor cell lysate. In this study, we sought to develop a simple and effective approach for therapeutic vaccination with autologous whole tumor cell lysate. Endogenous cell membranes harvested from cancer cells were formed into PEGylated nano-vesicles (PEG-NPs). PEG-NPs exhibited good serum stability in vitro and draining efficiency to local lymph nodes upon subcutaneous administration in vivo. Vaccination with PEG-NPs synthesized from murine melanoma cells elicited 3.7-fold greater antigen-specific cytotoxic CD8+ T lymphocyte responses, compared with standard vaccination with freeze-thawed lysate in tumor-bearing mice. Importantly, in combination with anti-programmed death-1 (αPD-1) IgG immunotherapy, PEG-NP vaccination induced 4.2-fold higher frequency of antigen-specific T cell responses (P < 0.0001) and mediated complete tumor regression in 63% of tumor-bearing animals (P < 0.01), compared with FT lysate + αPD-1 treatment that exhibited only 13% response rate. In addition, PEG-NPs + αPD-1 IgG combination immunotherapy protected all survivors against a subsequent tumor cell re-challenge. These results demonstrate a general strategy for eliciting anti-tumor immunity using endogenous cancer cell membranes formulated into stable vaccine nanoparticles.
Innate immune cells recognize and respond to pathogen-associated molecular patterns. In particular, polysaccharides found in the microbial cell wall are potent activators of dendritic cells (DCs). Here, we report a new class of nanocapsules, termed sugar-capsules, entirely composed of polysaccharides derived from the microbial cell wall. We show that sugar-capsules with a flexible polysaccharide shell and a hollow core efficiently drain to lymph nodes and activate DCs. In particular, sugar-capsules composed of mannan (Mann-capsule) carrying mRNA (mRNA) promote strong DC activation, mRNA translation, and antigen presentation on DCs. Mann-capsules elicit robust antigen-specific CD4+ and CD8α+ T-cell responses with antitumor efficacy in vivo. The strategy presented in this study is generally applicable for utilizing pathogen-derived molecular patterns for vaccines and immunotherapies.
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