Litcius/Paper detail

Bioengineered therapeutic systems for improving antitumor immunity

Ying Cao, Wenlu Yan, Wenzhe Yi, Qi Yin, Yaping Li

2024National Science Review7 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Immunotherapy, a monumental advancement in antitumor therapy, still yields limited clinical benefits owing to its unguaranteed efficacy and safety. Therapeutic systems derived from cellular, bacterial and viral sources possess inherent properties that are conducive to antitumor immunotherapy. However, crude biomimetic systems have restricted functionality and may produce undesired toxicity. With advances in biotechnology, various toolkits are available to add or subtract certain properties of living organisms to create flexible therapeutic platforms. This review elaborates on the creation of bioengineered systems, via gene editing, synthetic biology and surface engineering, to enhance immunotherapy. The modifying strategies of the systems are discussed, including equipment for navigation and recognition systems to improve therapeutic precision, the introduction of controllable components to control the duration and intensity of treatment, the addition of immunomodulatory components to amplify immune activation, and the removal of toxicity factors to ensure biosafety. Finally, we summarize the advantages of bioengineered immunotherapeutic systems and possible directions for their clinical translation.

Topics & Concepts

BiosafetyImmunotherapyImmune systemComputational biologyBiologyComputer scienceImmunologyBiotechnologyCAR-T cell therapy researchCancer Research and TreatmentsVirus-based gene therapy research