Litcius/Paper detail

Harnessing Engineered Immune Cells and Bacteria as Drug Carriers for Cancer Immunotherapy

Jingwen Jiang, Yanjuan Huang, Zishan Zeng, Chunshun Zhao

2023ACS Nano47 citationsDOI

Abstract

Immunotherapy continues to be in the spotlight of oncology therapy research in the past few years and has been proven to be a promising option to modulate one's innate and adaptive immune systems for cancer treatment. However, the poor delivery efficiency of immune agents, potential off-target toxicity, and nonimmunogenic tumors significantly limit its effectiveness and extensive application. Recently, emerging biomaterial-based drug carriers, including but not limited to immune cells and bacteria, are expected to be potential candidates to break the dilemma of immunotherapy, with their excellent natures of intrinsic tumor tropism and immunomodulatory activity. More than that, the tiny vesicles and physiological components derived from them have similar functions with their source cells due to the inheritance of various surface signal molecules and proteins. Herein, we presented representative examples about the latest advances of biomaterial-based delivery systems employed in cancer immunotherapy, including immune cells, bacteria, and their derivatives. Simultaneously, opportunities and challenges of immune cells and bacteria-based carriers are discussed to provide reference for their future application in cancer immunotherapy.

Topics & Concepts

Immune systemImmunotherapyCancer immunotherapyCancerDrug deliveryCancer cellCancer researchBiologyImmunologyMedicineNanotechnologyMaterials scienceGeneticsCancer Research and TreatmentsNanoplatforms for cancer theranosticsImmunotherapy and Immune Responses