Ultrasound-propelled oncolytic biomimetic microbubbles as in situ vaccines reprogram tumor immunosuppressive microenvironment

Li, Wan, Ping, Liang, Chunyu, Xia, Liliang, Yu, Rui, Tang, Xintong, Li, Chenchen, Tang, Nianhong, Wu, Zeyan, Huang, Jimei, Chen, Ruqian, Fu, Mingke, Jiao, Jie, Hu, Pan, Li, Rui, Li

Materials Today Bio |

Oncolytic peptides offer a novel anticancer paradigm by inducing membrane lysis-mediated cancer cell death and subsequent anticancer immunity to overcome tumor heterogeneity and treatment resistance. Despite its promising profiles, the clinical application of oncolytic peptides (such as LTX-315) is hampered by ticklish reasons like rapid plasma clearance, suboptimal biodistribution, and potential toxicity toward normal tissues. Herein, we innovatively engineered an ultrasound-propelled cancer cell membranes-hybridized lipid microbubbles to load oncolytic peptide LTX-315 (LCMBs) for precise and controlled oncolytic therapy. The LCMBs enabled the targeted delivery and stimuli-responsive release of LTX-315 in the tumor site under low-intensity focused ultrasound (US). The high accumulation of LTX-315 and sonoporation-mediated membrane permeabilization collectively lowered the therapeutic threshold of LTX-315, improving oncolytic efficacy and reducing the off-target toxicity. LTX-315 further potentiated rapid membrane lysis and subsequent immunogenic cell death, promoting the release of tumor antigens, forming an in situ vaccine, and boosting the activation of T cells. After being combined with anti-programmed death-1 (αPD-1) therapy, the integrated LCMBs + αPD-1 regimen elicited robust anticancer immune responses, so the primary tumor, tumor recurrence, and distant metastasis were notably restrained. In summary, this study developed a novel biomimetic LCMBs delivery platform to enhance the therapeutic efficacy of highly cytotoxic oncolytic peptides and promote anticancer immunotherapy, thereby effectively inhibiting tumor recurrence and metastasis.