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Cloaking Mesoporous Polydopamine with Bacterial Membrane Vesicles to Amplify Local and Systemic Antitumor Immunity.

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As adjuvants or antigens, bacterial membranes have been widely used in recent antibacterial and antitumor research, but they are often injected multiple times to achieve therapeutic outcomes, with limitations in… Click to show full abstract

As adjuvants or antigens, bacterial membranes have been widely used in recent antibacterial and antitumor research, but they are often injected multiple times to achieve therapeutic outcomes, with limitations in biosafety and clinical application. Herein, we leverage the biocompatibility and immune activation capacity of Salmonella strain VNP20009 to produce double-layered membrane vesicles (DMVs) for enhanced systemic safety and antitumor immunity. Considering the photothermal effect of polydopamine upon irradiation, VNP20009-derived DMVs are prepared to coat the surface of mesoporous polydopamine (MPD) nanoparticles, leading to the potential synergies between photothermal therapy mediated by MPD and immunotherapy magnified by DMVs. The single dose of MPD@DMV can passively target tumors and activate the immune system with upregulated T cell infiltration and secretion levels of pro-inflammatory factors as well as antitumor related cytokines. All of these promoted immune responses result in malignant melanoma tumor regression and extended survival time on local or distant tumor-bearing mouse models. Importantly, we further explore the advantages of intravenous injection of the MPD@DMV agent compared with its intratumoral injection, and the former demonstrates better long-term immune effects on animal bodies. Overall, this formulation design brings broader prospects for the autologous vaccine adjuvant by bacterial membrane vesicles in cancer therapy.

Keywords: antitumor; mesoporous polydopamine; antitumor immunity; membrane vesicles; bacterial membrane

Journal Title: ACS nano
Year Published: 2023

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