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Cited 2 time in webofscience Cited 3 time in scopus
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Membrane-immobilized gemcitabine for cancer-targetable NK cell surface engineering

Authors
Noh, Kyung MuJangid, Ashok KumarPark, JaewonKim, SungjunKim, Kyobum
Issue Date
Nov-2024
Publisher
Royal Society of Chemistry
Keywords
Doxecitine; Gemcitabine; Antimetabolites, Antineoplastic; Deoxycytidine; Gemcitabine; Polyethylene Glycols; Cancer Cells; Cell Immobilization; Cell Membranes; Controlled Drug Delivery; Covalent Bonds; Lung Cancer; Medical Applications; Selenium Compounds; Sulfur Compounds; Targeted Drug Delivery; Anti-tumor Efficacy; Cell Surface Engineering; Cell Surfaces; Cell Transfer; Cell-based; Disulphide Bonds; Gemcitabine; Natural Killer Cells; Tumor Microenvironments; Cell Engineering; Antineoplastic Antimetabolite; Doxecitine; Gemcitabine; Macrogol Derivative; Cell Engineering; Cell Membrane; Cell Proliferation; Chemistry; Drug Effect; Drug Screening; Drug Therapy; Human; Immunology; Metabolism; Natural Killer Cell; Pancreas Tumor; Surface Property; Tumor Cell Line; Antimetabolites, Antineoplastic; Cell Engineering; Cell Line, Tumor; Cell Membrane; Cell Proliferation; Deoxycytidine; Drug Screening Assays, Antitumor; Humans; Killer Cells, Natural; Pancreatic Neoplasms; Polyethylene Glycols; Surface Properties
Citation
Journal of Materials Chemistry B, v.12, no.46, pp 12087 - 12102
Pages
16
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
Journal of Materials Chemistry B
Volume
12
Number
46
Start Page
12087
End Page
12102
URI
https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/56206
DOI
10.1039/d4tb01639d
ISSN
2050-750X
2050-7518
Abstract
Although natural killer (NK) cell-based adoptive cell transfer (ACT) has shown promise in cancer immunotherapy, its efficacy against solid tumors is limited in the immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment (TME). Combinatorial therapies involving chemotherapeutic drugs such as gemcitabine (Gem) and NK cells have been developed to modulate the TME; however, their clinical application is constrained by low drug delivery efficiency and significant off-target toxicity. In this study, we developed cell membrane-immobilized Gem conjugates (i.e., lipid-Gem conjugates), designed to anchor seamlessly onto NK cell surfaces. Our modular-designed ex vivo cell surface engineeringmaterials comprise a lipid anchor for membrane immobilization, poly(ethylene glycol) to inhibit endocytosis, a disulfide bond as cleavable linker by glutathione (GSH) released during cancer cell lysis, and Gem for targeted sensitization. We demonstrated that the intrinsic properties of NK cells, such as proliferation and surface ligand availability, were preserved despite coating with lipid-Gem conjugates. Moreover, delivery of Gem prodrugs by lipid-Gem coated NK (GCNK) cells was shown to enhance antitumor efficacy against pancreatic cancer cells (PANC-1) through the following mechanisms: (1) NK cells recognized and attacked cancer cells, (2) intracellular GSH was leaked out from the lysed cancer cells, enabling cleavage of disulfide bond, (3) released Gem from the GCNK cells delivered to the target cells, (4) Gem upregulated MHC class I-related chain A and B on cancer cells, and (5) thereby activating NK cells led to enhance antitumor efficacy. The simultaneous co-delivery of membrane-immobilized Gem with NK cells could potentially facilitate both immune synapse-mediated cancer recognition and chemotherapeutic effects, offering a promising approach to enhance the anticancer efficacy of conventional ACTs.
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