Abstract

AbstractHeterogenous immune responses to checkpoint blockade therapy remain a major challenge to early prediction of treatment efficacy. Current methods of evaluating treatment efficacy in tumors are ineffective in accurately monitoring the disease status after immunotherapy early on. This study reports an immune response monitoring strategy that longitudinally reports on two crucial protease activities involved in T cell‐mediated target cell death, granzyme B (GrzB) and downstream caspase 3 (Casp3), during and after immune checkpoint antibody treatment. Specifically, activatable nanoreporters are engineered to sensitively and selectively capture the activity of GrzB and Casp3 enzymes in tumor cells triggered by cytotoxic T cells in real‐time, providing a direct readout of the tumor response to immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs). Furthermore, incorporating 3D tumor‐derived organoids and ex vivo cultures on microfluidic devices with nanoreporters enables high‐throughput screening of various ICIs and their combinations in immunocompetent tumor models. These findings suggest that efficient monitoring of dynamic immunological processes in the tumor microenvironment could help uncover mechanisms associated with ICI response or resistance. It is further anticipated that combining the dual‐sensing nanoreporter with tumor‐derived organoid‐on‐chip technology could lead to an early prediction of treatment outcomes with high fidelity and accelerate the development of optimal treatment in immuno‐oncology.

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