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      Engineering Magnetosomes for High-Performance Cancer Vaccination

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          Abstract

          A novel cancer vaccine is developed by using Fe 3O 4 magnetic nanoclusters (MNCs) as the core and cancer cell membranes decorated with anti-CD205 as the cloak. Because of the superparamagnetism and magnetization of MNCs, it is first achieved for the magnetic retention of vaccine in the lymph nodes with a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) guide, which opened the time window for antigen uptake by dendritic cells (DCs). Meanwhile, the camouflaged cancer cell membranes serve as a reservoir of various antigens, enabling subsequent multiantigenic response. Additionally, the decorated anti-CD205 direct more vaccine into CD8 + DCs, facilitating the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) I cross-presentation. These unique advantages together lead to a great proliferation of T cells with superior clonal diversity and cytotoxic activity. As a result, potent prophylactic and therapeutic effects with few abnormalities are observed on five different tumor models. Therefore, such a cancer-derived magnetosome with the integration of various recent nanotechnologies successfully demonstrates its promise for safe and high-performance cancer vaccination.

          Abstract

          A magnetosome was engineered for magnetic retention in lymph nodes and efficient activation of cellular immunity, which could serve as a high-performance cancer vaccine.

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          Most cited references28

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          Differential antigen processing by dendritic cell subsets in vivo.

          Dendritic cells (DCs) process and present self and foreign antigens to induce tolerance or immunity. In vitro models suggest that induction of immunity is controlled by regulating the presentation of antigen, but little is known about how DCs control antigen presentation in vivo. To examine antigen processing and presentation in vivo, we specifically targeted antigens to two major subsets of DCs by using chimeric monoclonal antibodies. Unlike CD8+ DCs that express the cell surface protein CD205, CD8- DCs, which are positive for the 33D1 antigen, are specialized for presentation on major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II. This difference in antigen processing is intrinsic to the DC subsets and is associated with increased expression of proteins involved in MHC processing.
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            Selected Toll-like receptor agonist combinations synergistically trigger a T helper type 1-polarizing program in dendritic cells.

            Toll-like receptors (TLRs) sense microbial products and initiate adaptive immune responses by activating dendritic cells (DCs). As pathogens may contain several TLR agonists, we sought to determine whether different TLRs cooperate in DC activation. In human and mouse DCs, TLR3 and TLR4 potently acted in synergy with TLR7, TLR8 and TLR9 in the induction of a selected set of genes. Synergic TLR stimulation increased production of interleukins 12 and 23 and increased the Delta-4/Jagged-1 ratio, leading to DCs with enhanced and sustained T helper type 1-polarizing capacity. Global gene transcriptional analysis showed that TLR synergy 'boosted' only approximately 1% of the transcripts induced by single TLR agonists. These results identify a 'combinatorial code' by which DCs discriminate pathogens and suggest new strategies for promoting T helper type 1 responses.
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              Engineering synthetic vaccines using cues from natural immunity.

              Vaccines aim to protect against or treat diseases through manipulation of the immune response, promoting either immunity or tolerance. In the former case, vaccines generate antibodies and T cells poised to protect against future pathogen encounter or attack diseased cells such as tumours; in the latter case, which is far less developed, vaccines block pathogenic autoreactive T cells and autoantibodies that target self tissue. Enormous challenges remain, however, as a consequence of our incomplete understanding of human immunity. A rapidly growing field of research is the design of vaccines based on synthetic materials to target organs, tissues, cells or intracellular compartments; to co-deliver immunomodulatory signals that control the quality of the immune response; or to act directly as immune regulators. There exists great potential for well-defined materials to further our understanding of immunity. Here we describe recent advances in the design of synthetic materials to direct immune responses, highlighting successes and challenges in prophylactic, therapeutic and tolerance-inducing vaccines.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                ACS Cent Sci
                ACS Cent Sci
                oc
                acscii
                ACS Central Science
                American Chemical Society
                2374-7943
                2374-7951
                03 April 2019
                22 May 2019
                : 5
                : 5
                : 796-807
                Affiliations
                []School of Life Science, Beijing Institute of Technology , Beijing 100081, P. R. China
                []State Key Laboratory of Biochemical Engineering, Institute of Process Engineering, Chinese Academy of Sciences , Beijing 100190, P. R. China
                [§ ]University of Chinese Academy of Sciences , Beijing 100049, P. R. China
                Author notes
                Article
                10.1021/acscentsci.9b00060
                6535768
                31139716
                1ba63199-1017-42a0-8deb-215387a89658
                Copyright © 2019 American Chemical Society

                This is an open access article published under an ACS AuthorChoice License, which permits copying and redistribution of the article or any adaptations for non-commercial purposes.

                History
                : 20 January 2019
                Categories
                Research Article
                Custom metadata
                oc9b00060
                oc-2019-00060c

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