Strong: In vivo antitumor responses induced by an antigen immobilized in nanogels via reducible bonds

Publication date

2016-12-21

Authors

Li, DandanISNI 0000000524044742
Sun, F.ISNI 0000000527707089
Bourajjaj, MeriemISNI 000000039369340X
Chen, Y.ISNI 0000000518030109
Pieters, Ebel H EISNI 0000000507296438
Chen, JianISNI 0000000518029810
van den Dikkenberg, JoepISNI 0000000391318542
Lou, BoISNI 0000000492910633
Camps, Marcel G M
Ossendorp, Ferry

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

taverne

Abstract

Cancer vaccines are at present mostly based on tumor associated protein antigens but fail to elicit strong cell-mediated immunity in their free form. For protein-based vaccines, the main challenges to overcome are the delivery of sufficient proteins into the cytosol of dendritic cells (DCs) and processing by, and presentation through, the MHC class I pathway. Recently, we developed a cationic dextran nanogel in which a model antigen (ovalbumin, OVA) is reversibly conjugated via disulfide bonds to the nanogel network to enable redox-sensitive intracellular release. In the present study, it is demonstrated that these nanogels, with the bound OVA, were efficiently internalized by DCs and were capable of maturating them. On the other hand, when the antigen was just physically entrapped in the nanogels, OVA was prematurely released before the particles were taken up by cells. When combined with an adjuvant (polyinosinic-polycytidylic acid, poly(I:C)), nanogels with conjugated OVA induced a strong protective and curative effect against melanoma in vivo. In a prophylactic vaccination setting, 90% of the mice vaccinated with nanogels with conjugated OVA + poly(I:C) did not develop a tumor. Moreover, in a therapeutic model, 40% of the mice showed clearance of established tumors and survived for the duration of the experiment (80 days) while the remaining mice showed substantial delay in tumor progression. In conclusion, our results demonstrate that conjugation of antigens to nanogels via reducible covalent bonds for intracellular delivery is a promising strategy to induce effective antigen-specific immune responses against cancer.

Keywords

Taverne, General Materials Science, SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being

Citation

Li, D, Sun, F, Bourajjaj, M, Chen, Y, Pieters, E H, Chen, J, Van Den Dikkenberg, J B, Lou, B, Camps, M G M, Ossendorp, F, Hennink, W E, Vermonden, T & Van Nostrum, C F 2016, 'Strong : In vivo antitumor responses induced by an antigen immobilized in nanogels via reducible bonds', Nanoscale, vol. 8, no. 47, pp. 19592-19604. https://doi.org/10.1039/c6nr05583d