Abstract

Immunotherapy has been regarded as a breakthrough in cancer treatment and achieved great success. However, the poor response rate is still a formidable challenge of current immunotherapies, especially in solid tumors without sufficient infiltration of immune cells, also known as "cold tumor." SAR405is a highly specific VPS34inhibitor and has been suggested as a potential approach converting "cold tumor" into "hot tumor" by inhibiting autophagy. In this study, a tri-functional doxorubicin (DOX) plus SAR405liposome system is established and further modified with a novel anti-PD-L1peptide JY4for targeted delivery (DOX-SAR-JY4LIPO ). The data here demonstrate that in a lung cancer xenograft mouse model, by facilitating the tumoral enrichment of both SAR405and DOX, DOX-SAR-JY4LIPO effectively increases the infiltration of cytotoxic lymphocytes in the tumor by synergizing DOX-induced immunogenic cell death (ICD) and SAR405-mediated upregulation of chemokines including CCL5and CXCL10. As results, DOX-SAR-JY4LIPO significantly inhibits tumor growth, metastasis, and resurrection by re-educating immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment. In conclusion, this study not only proves the concept of inhibiting autophagy for better immune infiltration in the tumor but also presents a novel tri-functional liposomal system that overcomes the deficiencies of current therapies and holds great promise in cancer immunotherapy.

Full Text
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