Cited 46 time in
- Title
- Curvature-sensing peptide inhibits tumour-derived exosomes for enhanced cancer immunotherapy
- Author(s)
- S Shin; Hyewon Ko; C H Kim; B K Yoon; S Son; J A Lee; J M Shin; J Lee; S H Song; J A Jackman; J H Park
- Bibliographic Citation
- Nature Materials, vol. 22, no. 5, pp. 656-665
- Publication Year
- 2023
- Abstract
- Tumour-derived exosomes (T-EXOs) impede immune checkpoint blockade therapies, motivating pharmacological efforts to inhibit them. Inspired by how antiviral curvature-sensing peptides disrupt membrane-enveloped virus particles in the exosome size range, we devised a broadly useful strategy that repurposes an engineered antiviral peptide to disrupt membrane-enveloped T-EXOs for synergistic cancer immunotherapy. The membrane-targeting peptide inhibits T-EXOs from various cancer types and exhibits pH-enhanced membrane disruption relevant to the tumour microenvironment. The combination of T-EXO-disrupting peptide and programmed cell death protein-1 antibody-based immune checkpoint blockade therapy improves treatment outcomes in tumour-bearing mice. Peptide-mediated disruption of T-EXOs not only reduces levels of circulating exosomal programmed death-ligand 1, but also restores CD8+ T cell effector function, prevents premetastatic niche formation and reshapes the tumour microenvironment in vivo. Our findings demonstrate that peptide-induced T-EXO depletion can enhance cancer immunotherapy and support the potential of peptide engineering for exosome-targeting applications.
- ISSN
- 1476-1122
- Publisher
- Springer-Nature Pub Group
- Full Text Link
- http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41563-023-01515-2
- Type
- Article
- Appears in Collections:
- Division of Research on National Challenges > Bionanotechnology Research Center > 1. Journal Articles
- Files in This Item:
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