
Nanoalbumin–prodrug conjugates prepared via a thiolation‐and‐conjugation method improve cancer chemotherapy and immune checkpoint blockade therapy by promoting CD8 + T‐cell infiltration
Author(s) -
Chen Long,
Xu Nuo,
Wang Pan,
Zhu Haichuan,
Zhang Zijian,
Yang Zhanqun,
Zhang Wenyuan,
Guo Hongyan,
Lin Jian
Publication year - 2023
Publication title -
bioengineering and translational medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2380-6761
DOI - 10.1002/btm2.10377
Subject(s) - prodrug , conjugate , immune checkpoint , doxorubicin , cancer research , in vivo , chemistry , cancer cell , cytotoxicity , immune system , in vitro , pharmacology , t cell , blockade , biochemistry , chemotherapy , cancer , medicine , immunology , biology , receptor , mathematical analysis , mathematics , microbiology and biotechnology
Protein–drug conjugates are emerging tools to combat cancers. Here, we adopted an indirect thiolation‐and‐conjugation method as a general strategy to prepare protein–drug conjugates. We found for the first time that this method led to the formation of nanometric conjugates, probably due to the formation of intermolecular disulfide bonds, which facilitated enhanced uptake by cancer cells. As a proof‐of‐concept application in cancer therapy, a nanometric albumin–doxorubicin prodrug conjugate (NanoAlb‐proDOX) was prepared. The nanometric size promoted its uptake by cancer cells, and the prodrug characteristic defined its selective cytotoxicity toward cancer cells in vitro and reduced side effects in vivo. In multiple tumor xenograft models, nanometric NanoAlb‐proDOX showed superior antitumor activity and synergy with immune checkpoint blockade, probably due to the synergistically enhanced tumor CD8 + T‐cell infiltration and activation. Hence, the thiolation‐and‐conjugation strategy may serve as a generally applicable method for preparing drug conjugates, and the proof‐of‐concept nanometric albumin–doxorubicin conjugate may be a good choice for antitumor therapy with the ability to co‐stimulate the efficacy of immune checkpoint blockade.