Journal of Nanobiotechnology (Feb 2023)

Apoptotic tumor cell-derived microparticles loading Napabucasin inhibit CSCs and synergistic immune therapy

  • Boping Jing,
  • Feng Guo,
  • Rui An,
  • Yu Gao,
  • Yuman Li,
  • Yuji Xie,
  • Jing Wang,
  • Yihan Chen,
  • He Li,
  • Tang Gao,
  • Qiaofeng Jin,
  • Li Zhang,
  • Mingxing Xie

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12951-023-01792-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 1
pp. 1 – 19

Abstract

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Abstract Background Cancer stem cells (CSCs) are crucial for the growth, metastasis, drug resistance, recurrence, and spread of tumors. Napabucasin (NAP) could effectively inhibit CSC, but its mechanism has not been fully explained. Additionally, NAP also has the drawbacks of poor water solubility and low utilization. Therefore, this study not only elaborated the new mechanism of NAP inhibiting CSCs, but also built NAP-loaded nanoprobes using apoptotic tumor-derived microparticles (TMPs) as carriers to combine diagnose and treat of colon cancer and lessen the adverse effects of NAP. Results The study discovered a new mechanism for NAP inhibiting tumors. NAP, in addition to inhibiting STAT3, may also inhibit STAT1, thereby inhibiting the expression of CD44, and the stemness of colon cancer. N3-TMPs@NAP was successfully synthesized, and it possessed a lipid bilayer with a particle size of 220.13 ± 4.52 nm, as well as strong tumor binding ability and anti-tumor effect in vitro. In static PET/CT imaging studies, the tumor was clearly visible and showed higher uptake after N3-TMPs@NAP injection than after oral administration. The average tumor volume and weight of the N3-TMPs@NAP group on day 14 of the treatment studies were computed to be 270.55 ± 107.59 mm3 and 0.30 ± 0.12 g, respectively. These values were significantly lower than those of the other groups. Additionally, N3-TMPs@NAP might prevent colon cancer from spreading to the liver. Furthermore, due to TMPs’ stimulation of innate immunity, N3-TMPs@NAP might stimulate anti-tumor. Conclusions As a combined diagnostic and therapeutic nanoprobe, N3-TMPs@NAP could successfully conduct PET/CT imaging, suppress CSCs, and synergistically stimulate anticancer immune responses. Additionally, this nanoprobe might someday be employed in clinical situations because TMPs for it can be produced from human tissue and NAP has FDA approval.

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