Manganese oxide nanomaterials boost cancer immunotherapy.

State Key Laboratory of Rare Earth Resource Utilization, Changchun Institute of Applied Chemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Changchun, 130022, China. mapa675@ciac.ac.cn. School of Biomedical Engineering, Sun Yat-sen University, Guangzhou, 510006, China. Institute of Frontier and Interdisciplinarity Science and Institute of Molecular Sciences and Engineering, Shandong University, Qingdao, 266237, China. University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei, 230026, China.

Journal of materials chemistry. B. 2021;(35):7117-7131

Abstract

Immunotherapy, a strategy that leverages the host immune function to fight against cancer, plays an increasingly important role in clinical tumor therapy. In spite of the great success achieved in not only clinical treatment but also basic research, cancer immunotherapy still faces many huge challenges. Manganese oxide nanomaterials (MONs), as ideal tumor microenvironment (TME)-responsive biomaterials, are able to dramatically elicit anti-tumor immune responses in multiple ways, indicating great prospects for immunotherapy. In this review, on the basis of different mechanisms to boost immunotherapy, major highlighted topics are presented, covering adjusting an immunosuppressive TME by generating O2 (like O2-sensitized photodynamic therapy (PDT), programmed cell death ligand-1 (PD-L1) expression downregulation, reprogramming tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs), and restraining tumor angiogenesis and lactic acid exhaustion), inducing immunogenic cell death (ICD), photothermal therapy (PTT) induction, activating the stimulator of interferon gene (STING) pathway and immunoadjuvants for nanovaccines. We hope that this review will provide holistic understanding about MONs and their application in cancer immunotherapy, and thus pave the way to the translation from bench to bedside in the future.

Methodological quality

Publication Type : Review

Metadata

MeSH terms : Nanostructures ; Neoplasms