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Hybrid‐Membrane‐Decorated Prussian Blue for Effective Cancer Immunotherapy via Tumor‐Associated Macrophages Polarization and Hypoxia Relief

Lin Hou, Xuan Gong, Jing Yang, Huijuan Zhang, Weijing Yang, Xiaoyuan Chen

2022Advanced Materials141 citationsDOI

Abstract

Both tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) and hypoxia condition severely restrict the antitumor potency during cancer immunotherapy. It is essential to overcome the two issues for improving therapeutic efficacy. In this study, a hollow mesoporous Prussian blue (HMPB) nanosystem with mannose decoration and hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) adsorption is built, to form Man-HMPB/HCQ. It can facilitate cellular internalization via mannose-receptor mediated endocytosis and induce TAM polarization via iron ion/HCQ release with HMPB degradation. The hybrid macrophage and thylakoid (TK) membrane is camouflaged on the Man-HMPB/HCQ surface, denoted as TK-M@Man-HMPB/HCQ, to reduce in vivo reticuloendothelial system uptake, enhance tumor accumulation, and mitigate hypoxia. The in vivo results indicate that TK-M@Man-HMPB/HCQ notably inhibits tumor growth, induces TAM polarization, facilitates cytotoxic T lymphocytes infiltration, and alleviates hypoxia microenvironment. The rational design may provide a new pathway to modulate the tumor microenvironment for promoting cancer immunotherapy effects.

Topics & Concepts

Tumor microenvironmentTumor hypoxiaPrussian blueIn vivoCancer researchImmunotherapyCancer immunotherapyMannose receptorMaterials scienceCancer cellPharmacologyMedicineImmunologyImmune systemChemistryIn vitroBiologyMacrophageCancerBiochemistryInternal medicineRadiation therapyTumor cellsElectrodeBiotechnologyElectrochemistryPhysical chemistryNanoplatforms for cancer theranosticsImmune cells in cancerExtracellular vesicles in disease