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A Metabolic Reprogramming Amino Acid Polymer as an Immunosurveillance Activator and Leukemia Targeting Drug Carrier for T‐Cell Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia
Compromised immunosurveillance leads to chemotherapy resistance and disease relapse of hematological malignancies. Amino acid metabolism regulates immune responses and cancer; however, a druggable amino acid metabolite to enhance antitumor immunosurveillance and improve leukemia targeting‐therapy efficacy remains unexplored. Here, an L‐phenylalanine polymer, Metabolic Reprogramming Immunosurveillance Activation Nanomedicine (MRIAN), is invented to effectively target bone marrow (BM) and activate the immune surveillance in T‐cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T‐ALL) by inhibiting myeloid‐derived suppressor cells (MDSCs) in T‐ALL murine model. Stable‐isotope tracer and in vivo drug distribution experiments show that T‐ALL cells and MDSCs have enhanced cellular uptake of L‐phenylalanine and MRIANs than normal hematopoietic cells and progenitors. Therefore, MRIAN assembled Doxorubicin (MRIAN‐Dox) specifically targets T‐ALL cells and MDSCs but spare normal hematopoietic cells and hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells with enhanced leukemic elimination efficiency. Consequently, MRIAN‐Dox has reduced cardiotoxicity and myeloablation side effects in treating T‐ALL mice. Mechanistically, MRIAN degrades into L‐phenylalanine, which inhibits PKM2 activity and reduces ROS levels in MDSCs to disturb their immunosuppressive function and increase their differentiation toward normal myeloid cells. Overall, a novel amino acid metabolite nanomedicine is invented to treat T‐ALL through the combination of leukemic cell targeting and immunosurveillance stimulation.
A Metabolic Reprogramming Amino Acid Polymer as an Immunosurveillance Activator and Leukemia Targeting Drug Carrier for T‐Cell Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia
Compromised immunosurveillance leads to chemotherapy resistance and disease relapse of hematological malignancies. Amino acid metabolism regulates immune responses and cancer; however, a druggable amino acid metabolite to enhance antitumor immunosurveillance and improve leukemia targeting‐therapy efficacy remains unexplored. Here, an L‐phenylalanine polymer, Metabolic Reprogramming Immunosurveillance Activation Nanomedicine (MRIAN), is invented to effectively target bone marrow (BM) and activate the immune surveillance in T‐cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T‐ALL) by inhibiting myeloid‐derived suppressor cells (MDSCs) in T‐ALL murine model. Stable‐isotope tracer and in vivo drug distribution experiments show that T‐ALL cells and MDSCs have enhanced cellular uptake of L‐phenylalanine and MRIANs than normal hematopoietic cells and progenitors. Therefore, MRIAN assembled Doxorubicin (MRIAN‐Dox) specifically targets T‐ALL cells and MDSCs but spare normal hematopoietic cells and hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells with enhanced leukemic elimination efficiency. Consequently, MRIAN‐Dox has reduced cardiotoxicity and myeloablation side effects in treating T‐ALL mice. Mechanistically, MRIAN degrades into L‐phenylalanine, which inhibits PKM2 activity and reduces ROS levels in MDSCs to disturb their immunosuppressive function and increase their differentiation toward normal myeloid cells. Overall, a novel amino acid metabolite nanomedicine is invented to treat T‐ALL through the combination of leukemic cell targeting and immunosurveillance stimulation.
A Metabolic Reprogramming Amino Acid Polymer as an Immunosurveillance Activator and Leukemia Targeting Drug Carrier for T‐Cell Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia
Li, Changzheng (Autor:in) / You, Xinru (Autor:in) / Xu, Xi (Autor:in) / Wu, Binghuo (Autor:in) / Liu, Yuye (Autor:in) / Tong, Tong (Autor:in) / Chen, Jie (Autor:in) / Li, Yishan (Autor:in) / Dai, Chunlei (Autor:in) / Ye, Zhitao (Autor:in)
Advanced Science ; 9
01.03.2022
15 pages
Aufsatz (Zeitschrift)
Elektronische Ressource
Englisch
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