Development of a Cancer Nanovaccine to Induce Antigen-specific Immune Responses Based on Large-Sized Porous Silica Nanoparticles.

ACS applied materials & interfaces(2023)

Cited 1|Views11
No score
Abstract
Cancer vaccine is one of the immunotherapeutic strategies aiming to effectively deliver cancer antigens to professional antigen-presenting cells such as dendritic cells (DCs), macrophages, and B cells to elicit a cancer-specific immune response. Despite the advantages of the cancer vaccine that can be applied to various cancer types, the clinical approach is limited due to the non-specific or adverse immune responses, stability, and safety issues. In this study, we report an injectable nanovaccine platform based on large-sized (∼350 nm) porous silica nanoparticles (PSNs). We found that large-sized PSNs, called PS3, facilitated the formation of an antigen supply depot at the site of injection so that a single injection of PSN-based nanovaccine elicited sufficient tumor-specific cell-mediated and humoral immune response. As a result, antigen-loaded PS3 induced successful tumor regression in prophylactic and therapeutic vaccination.
More
Translated text
Key words
anticancer immunity,antigen depot,cancer immunotherapy,nanovaccine,silica nanoparticles
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined