Abstract
Immunogenic cell death (ICD) is associated with the release of damage-associated molecular patterns, including ATP, to promote an effective immune cycle against tumors. However, tumors have evolved an effective strategy for degrading extracellular immunostimulatory ATP via the ATP-adenosine axis, allowing the sequential action of the ectonucleotidases CD39 to degrade accumulated immunostimulatory ATP into pleiotropic immunosuppressive adenosine. Here, an ingenious dissolving microneedle patch (DMNs) is designed for the intralesional delivery of CD39 inhibitor (sodium polyoxotungstate, POM-1) and ICD inducer (IR780) co-encapsulated solid lipid nanoparticles (P/I SLNs) for antitumor therapy. Upon insertion into the tumor site, IR780 induces ICD modalities with the release of damage-associated molecular patterns from endogenous tissues, which activates the antitumor immune cycle. Simultaneously, POM-1 promotes the liberation of immunostimulatory ATP and lowers the level of immunosuppressive extracellular adenosine, which supported immune control of tumors via recruiting CD39-expressing immune cells. In vivo antitumor studies prove that this platform can effectively eliminate mice melanoma (tumor growth inhibitory rate of 96.5%) and colorectal adenocarcinoma (tumor growth inhibitory rate of 93.5%). Our results shed light on the immunological aspects of combinatorial phototherapy and ATP-adenosine regulation, which will broaden the scope of synergistic antitumor immunotherapy.
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