Abstract

Immunotherapy is revolutionizing cancer treatment. Recent clinical success with immune checkpoint inhibitors, chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapy, and adoptive immune cellular therapies has generated excitement and new hopes for patients and investigators. However, clinically efficacious responses to cancer immunotherapy occur only in a minority of patients. One reason is the tumor microenvironment (TME), which potently inhibits the generation and delivery of optimal antitumor immune responses. As our understanding of TME continues to grow, strategies are being developed to change the TME toward one that augments the emergence of strong antitumor immunity. These strategies include eliminating tumor bulk to provoke the release of tumor antigens, using adjuvants to enhance antigen-presenting cell function, and employ agents that enhance immune cell effector activity. This article reviews the development of β-glucan and β-glucan-based nanoparticles as immune modulators of TME, as well as their potential benefit and future therapeutic applications. Cell-wall β-glucans from natural sources including plant, fungi, and bacteria are molecules that adopt pathogen-associated molecular pattern (PAMP) known to target specific receptors on immune cell subsets. Emerging data suggest that the TME can be actively manipulated by β-glucans and their related nanoparticles. In this review, we discuss the mechanisms of conditioning TME using β-glucan and β-glucan-based nanoparticles, and how this strategy enables future design of optimal combination cancer immunotherapies.

Highlights

  • Reviewed by: Carlos Alfaro, Universidad de Navarra, Spain Dmitry Bulavin, Institute of Research on Cancer and Aging in Nice, France Christopher Gregory, University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom

  • Beta Glucan Nanoparticles for Cancer Immunotherapy regulatory roles in tumor generation and progression [6,7,8]. These studies resulted in the development of first cancer immunotherapy agent anti-CTLA-4 monoclonal antibody, ipilimumab, which blocks the negative co-stimulatory signaling as a result of binding between cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated protein 4 (CTLA-4) and B7.1 [9]

  • Clinical trial with ipilimumab demonstrated greater durable responses in advanced melanoma patients as compare to conventional therapy; it was approved by the US Food and Drug administration (FDA) for the treatment of unresectable or metastatic melanoma in 2011 [10]

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Summary

Blocking immunosuppressive enzymes secreted by regulatory cells

N-hydroxy-l-Arg (NOHA) (NOHA targets enzyme (arginase)-expressing M2-type macrophages). 1-methyl-tryptophan (IDO inhibitor) (IDO is enzyme secreted by regulatory cells). Depleting regulatory Clodronate encapsulated in liposomes cells (deplete macrophages) mAbs targeting Gr-1 (deplete MDSCs)

Reprogramming
Findings
Manipulating cytokines in TME
Full Text
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