Biomimetic inducer enabled dual ferroptosis of tumor and M2-type macrophages for enhanced tumor immunotherapy

Mingqi Chen, Yucui Shen, Yinying Pu, Bangguo Zhou, Jinhong Bing, Min Ge, Yaxuan Zhu, Shuang Gao, Wencheng Wu*, Min Zhou*, Jianlin Shi*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

30 Scopus citations

Abstract

Tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) are abundant in the tumor microenvironment which promotes the formation of the immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment (ITME) through multiple mechanisms, severely counteracting the therapeutic efficacy of immunotherapy. In this study, a novel biomimetic ferroptosis inducer (D@FMN-M) capable of ITME regulation for enhanced cancer ferroptosis immunotherapy is reported. Upon tumor accumulation of D@FMN-M, the intratumoral mild acidity triggers the biodegradation of Fe-enriched nanocarriers and the concurrent co-releases of dihydroartemisinin (DHA) and Fe3+. The released Fe3+ is reduced to Fe2+ by consuming intratumoral glutathione (GSH), which promotes abundant free radical generation via triggering Fenton and Fe2+-DHA reactions, thus inducing ferroptosis of both cancer cells and M2-type TAMs. Resultantly, the anticancer immune response is strongly activated by the massive tumor-associated antigens released by ferroptositic cancer cells. Also importantly, the ferroptosis-sensitive M2-type TAMs will be either damaged or gradually domesticated to ferroptosis-resistant M1 TAMs under the ferroptosis stress, favoring the normalization of ITME and finally amplifying cancer ferroptosis immunotherapeutic efficacy. This work provides a novel strategy for ferroptosis immunotherapy of solid tumors featuring TAMs infiltration and immunosuppression by inducing dual ferroptosis of tumor cells and M2-type TAMs.

Original languageEnglish
Article number122386
JournalBiomaterials
Volume303
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2023
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Ferroptosis inducer
  • Immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment
  • M2-type macrophages
  • Tumor therapy

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