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Cited 31 time in webofscience Cited 20 time in scopus
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Lipid anchor-mediated NK cell surface engineering for enhanced cancer immunotherapyopen access

Authors
Kim, SungjunLi, ShujinGajendiran, ManiJangid, Ashok KumarLee, Dong-JoonJung, Han-SungKim, Kyobum
Issue Date
Oct-2023
Publisher
ELSEVIER
Keywords
Ex vivo cell surface engineering; Lipid mediated biomaterials; Single cell coating; Natural killer cell; Triple -negative breast cancer; Cancer immunotherapy
Citation
Chemical Engineering Journal, v.473, pp 1 - 13
Pages
13
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
Chemical Engineering Journal
Volume
473
Start Page
1
End Page
13
URI
https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/21514
DOI
10.1016/j.cej.2023.145211
ISSN
1385-8947
1873-3212
Abstract
Current natural killer (NK) cell-based cancer immunotherapy for the treatment of solid tumors often exhibits insufficient cancer recognition specificity, thereby limiting therapeutic anticancer efficacy, especially for triplenegative breast cancers (TNBCs). In this study, we develop artificial lipid-folate conjugates, for stable anchoring onto NK cell surfaces via hydrophobic interactions, thus augmenting folate-mediated ligand-receptor immune interactions with target cancers. This hydrophobized conjugate anchor provides additional cancer recognition ligands without any sophisticated genetic modification, and successfully enhances the anticancer efficacies of surface-coated NK (SCNK) cells without disturbing their intrinsic properties. Augmented cancer recognition ability sequentially promotes the secretion of cytolytic granules (granzyme and perforin) with cytokine (TNF-& alpha;), demonstrating improved cytotoxicity of the SCNK cells. Furthermore, the SCNK cells significantly infiltrate into the tumor site, inducing tumor apoptosis/necrosis, and suppressing tumor progression and metastasis in TNBC mouse models. Taken together, our artificial lipid-folate conjugates enable the treatment of solid tumors by augmenting the cancer-recognition and tumor targeting capacity of surface-engineered NK cells.
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College of Engineering (Department of Chemical and Biochemical Engineering)
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