Multifunctional oncolytic nanoparticles deliver self-replicating IL-12 RNA to eliminate established tumors and prime systemic immunity

  • Yingzhong Li
  • , Zhijun Su
  • , Weiyu Zhao
  • , Xinfu Zhang
  • , Noor Momin
  • , Chengxiang Zhang
  • , K. Dane Wittrup
  • , Yizhou Dong
  • , Darrell J. Irvine
  • , Ron Weiss

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

194 Scopus citations

Abstract

Therapies that synergistically stimulate immunogenic cancer cell death (ICD), inflammation, and immune priming are of great interest for cancer immunotherapy. However, even multi-agent therapies often fail to trigger all of the steps necessary for self-sustaining anti-tumor immunity. Here we describe self-replicating RNAs encapsulated in lipid nanoparticles (LNP-replicons), which combine three key elements: (1) an LNP composition that potently promotes ICD, (2) RNA that stimulates danger sensors in transfected cells, and (3) RNA-encoded IL-12 for modulation of immune cells. Intratumoral administration of LNP-replicons led to high-level expression of IL-12, stimulation of a type I interferon response, and cancer cell ICD, resulting in a highly inflamed tumor microenvironment and priming of systemic anti-tumor immunity. In several mouse models of cancer, a single intratumoral injection of replicon-LNPs eradicated large established tumors, induced protective immune memory, and enabled regression of distal uninjected tumors. LNP-replicons are thus a promising multifunctional single-agent immunotherapeutic.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)882-893
Number of pages12
JournalNature Cancer
Volume1
Issue number9
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Sep 2020
Externally publishedYes

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