Litcius/Paper detail

Tumour-derived microparticles obtained through microwave irradiation induce immunogenic cell death in lung adenocarcinoma

Yali Wu, Wenjuan Chen, Jingjing Deng, Xinghui Cao, Zimo Yang, Jiangbin Chen, Qi Tan, Enping Zhou, Minglei Li, Jiatong Liu, Mengfei Guo, Yang Jin

2025Nature Nanotechnology22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Tumour-derived microparticles (TMPs), extracellular vesicles traditionally obtained upon ultraviolet (UV) radiation of tumour cells, hold promise in tumour immunotherapies and vaccines and have demonstrated potential as drug delivery systems for tumour treatment. However, concerns remain regarding the limited efficacy and safety of UV-derived TMPs. Here we introduce a microwave (MW)-assisted method for preparing TMPs, termed MW-TMPs. Brief exposure of tumour cells to short-wavelength MW radiation promotes the release of TMPs showing superior in vivo antitumour activity and safety compared with UV-TMPs. MW-TMPs induce immunogenic cell death and reprogramme suppressive tumour immune microenvironments in different lung tumour models, enabling dual targeting of tumour cells by natural killer and T cells. We show that they can efficiently deliver methotrexate to tumours, synergistically boosting the efficacy of PD-L1 blockade. This MW-TMP development strategy is simpler, more efficient and safer than traditional UV-TMP methods.

Topics & Concepts

Microwave irradiationIrradiationProgrammed cell deathMicrowaveAdenocarcinomaLungCellCancer researchNanotechnologyMaterials scienceChemistryBiologyApoptosisMedicineCancerPhysicsBiochemistryNuclear physicsInternal medicineQuantum mechanicsGeneticsExtracellular vesicles in diseaseInhalation and Respiratory Drug DeliveryNanoplatforms for cancer theranostics