Author
Listed:
- Yixuan Liu
(Peking University
Peking University)
- Ying Xie
(Peking University
Peking University)
- Yuling Chen
(Peking University
Peking University)
- Jialun Duan
(Peking University
Peking University)
- Chunjie Bao
(Peking University
Peking University)
- Jinling Wang
(Peking University
Peking University)
- Hexuan Feng
(Peking University
Peking University)
- Mengjie Wang
(Peking University
Peking University)
- Yuxin Ren
(Peking University
Peking University)
- Peishan Li
(Peking University
Peking University)
- Qian Luo
(Peking University
Peking University)
- Jiarui Xu
(Peking University
Peking University)
- Min Jiang
(Peking University
Peking University)
- Yanchen Men
(Peking University
Peking University)
- Yang Wu
(Peking University
Peking University)
- Jianwei Li
(Peking University
Peking University)
- Guiling Wang
(Peking University
Peking University)
- Wanliang Lu
(Peking University
Peking University)
Abstract
Immune checkpoint blockade therapy using programmed cell death 1 (PD1) or programmed death ligand 1 (PD-L1) has made significant progress in the treatment of advanced cancers, with some patients achieving long-term remission without clinical recurrence. However, only a minority of colon cancer patients respond to the therapy. Here, we report a protease-cleavable anti-PD-L1 antibody liposome, eLipo anti-PD-L1, for enhancing colon cancer therapy. In vivo, eLipo anti-PD-L1 is cleaved by legumain at colon cancer site into pegylated anti-PD-L1 and cancer-homing doxorubicin liposome. Functional assessments show cancer-targeting, legumain-responding, tumor-penetrating, and immune-activating effects, as well as efficacy in treating colon cancer-bearing mice in vivo. Further mechanistic analysis implicates genes related to T cell differentiation and T cell receptor signaling as potential molecular mediators. Lastly, human colorectal cancer tissue evaluations verify expressions of PD-L1 and legumain, hinting a potential translatability. Our study thus suggests that eLipo anti-PD-L1 may be a feasible vector for co-delivery of immunochemotherapy for colon cancer.
Suggested Citation
Yixuan Liu & Ying Xie & Yuling Chen & Jialun Duan & Chunjie Bao & Jinling Wang & Hexuan Feng & Mengjie Wang & Yuxin Ren & Peishan Li & Qian Luo & Jiarui Xu & Min Jiang & Yanchen Men & Yang Wu & Jianwe, 2025.
"A protease-cleavable liposome for co-delivery of anti-PD-L1 and doxorubicin for colon cancer therapy in mice,"
Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 16(1), pages 1-22, December.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:natcom:v:16:y:2025:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-025-57965-6
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-57965-6
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