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Blood–brain barrier permeable nano immunoconjugates induce local immune responses for glioma therapy
- Galstyan, Anna;
- Markman, Janet L;
- Shatalova, Ekaterina S;
- Chiechi, Antonella;
- Korman, Alan J;
- Patil, Rameshwar;
- Klymyshyn, Dmytro;
- Tourtellotte, Warren G;
- Israel, Liron L;
- Braubach, Oliver;
- Ljubimov, Vladimir A;
- Mashouf, Leila A;
- Ramesh, Arshia;
- Grodzinski, Zachary B;
- Penichet, Manuel L;
- Black, Keith L;
- Holler, Eggehard;
- Sun, Tao;
- Ding, Hui;
- Ljubimov, Alexander V;
- Ljubimova, Julia Y
- et al.
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-11719-3Abstract
Brain glioma treatment with checkpoint inhibitor antibodies to cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated antigen 4 (a-CTLA-4) and programmed cell death-1 (a-PD-1) was largely unsuccessful due to their inability to cross blood-brain barrier (BBB). Here we describe targeted nanoscale immunoconjugates (NICs) on natural biopolymer scaffold, poly(β-L-malic acid), with covalently attached a-CTLA-4 or a-PD-1 for systemic delivery across the BBB and activation of local brain anti-tumor immune response. NIC treatment of mice bearing intracranial GL261 glioblastoma (GBM) results in an increase of CD8+ T cells, NK cells and macrophages with a decrease of regulatory T cells (Tregs) in the brain tumor area. Survival of GBM-bearing mice treated with NIC combination is significantly longer compared to animals treated with single checkpoint inhibitor-bearing NICs or free a-CTLA-4 and a-PD-1. Our study demonstrates trans-BBB delivery of tumor-targeted polymer-conjugated checkpoint inhibitors as an effective GBM treatment via activation of both systemic and local privileged brain tumor immune response.
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