Photochemically controlled activation of STING by CAIX-targeting photocaged agonists to suppress tumor cell growth

  • Chunyong Ding*
  • , Mengyan Du
  • , Zhi Xiong
  • , Xue Wang
  • , Hongji Li
  • , Ende He
  • , Han Li
  • , Yijing Dang
  • , Qing Lu
  • , Shicong Li
  • , Ruoxuan Xiao
  • , Zhiai Xu
  • , Lili Jing*
  • , Liufu Deng
  • , Xiyuan Wang
  • , Meiyu Geng
  • , Zuoquan Xie*
  • , Ao Zhang*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

15 Scopus citations

Abstract

Controllable activation of the innate immune adapter protein - stimulator of interferon genes (STING) pathway is a critical challenge for the clinical development of STING agonists due to the potential “on-target off-tumor” toxicity caused by systematic activation of STING. Herein, we designed and synthesized a photo-caged STING agonist 2 with a tumor cell-targeting carbonic anhydrase inhibitor warhead, which could be readily uncaged by blue light to release the active STING agonist leading to remarkable activation of STING signaling. Furthermore, compound 2 was found to preferentially target tumor cells, stimulate the STING signaling in zebrafish embryo upon photo-uncaging and to induce proliferation of macrophages and upregulation of the mRNA expression of STING as well as its downstream NF-kB and cytokines, thus leading to significant suppression of tumor cell growth in a photo-dependent manner with reduced systemic toxicity. This photo-caged agonist not only provides a powerful tool to precisely trigger STING signalling, but also represents a novel controllable STING activation strategy for safer cancer immunotherapy.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)5956-5964
Number of pages9
JournalChemical Science
Volume14
Issue number22
DOIs
StatePublished - 15 May 2023

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