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Targeting PD‐L1 with DNA Aptamers and Conjugated with Gemcitabine as a Novel Therapeutic Strategy for Bladder Cancer Chemotherapy Combined with Immunotherapy.

Authors :
Hu, Xing
Zeng, Hongliang
Peng, Yongbo
Deng, Minhua
Xiang, Wei
Liu, Biao
Liu, Jiahao
Fu, Yunlong
Hu, Zhiqiang
Hou, Weibin
Liu, Xuewen
Tang, Jin
Long, Zhi
Wang, Long
Liu, Jianye
Source :
Small Science; Dec2023, Vol. 3 Issue 12, p1-13, 13p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Due to the poor stability and adverse effects of chemotherapy drugs, such as gemcitabine, the current effectiveness of traditional chemotherapy is minimal. Some patients also show a low response rate to immunotherapy. Therefore, a novel material PD‐L1‐GEMs is designed and synthesized with targeted specificity. PD‐L1‐GEMs specifically bind to bladder cancer cells. Free gemcitabine cleaved by a phosphatase enters bladder cancer cells through the macropinocytosis pathway and induces cytotoxicity. PD‐L1‐GEMs show good stability, binding specificity, and significant inhibitory effects in vitro. Two bladder tumor models (subcutaneous model and in situ model) show inhibition of growth and progression in PD‐L1‐GEMs treatment, as well as good biosafety in vivo. The PD‐L1 aptamer blocks the binding of PD‐L1 on the tumor cell surface to PD‐1 on T lymphocytes, restoring their immune function, inducing cytokine production and aggregation, and exerting an immune killing role on bladder cancer cells. PD‐L1‐GEMs represent a successful chemotherapy–immunotherapy strategy for bladder cancer. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
Volume :
3
Issue :
12
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Small Science
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
174346004
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/smsc.202300104