Co-delivery of IOX1 and doxorubicin for antibody-independent cancer chemo-immunotherapy

Jing Liu(Zhejiang University), Zhihao Zhao(Zhejiang University), Nasha Qiu(Zhejiang University), Quan Zhou(Zhejiang University), Guowei Wang(Zhejiang University), Haiping Jiang(Zhejiang University), Ying Piao(Zhejiang University), Zhuxian Zhou(Zhejiang University), Jianbin Tang(Zhejiang University), Youqing Shen(Ministry of Education)
Nature Communications
April 23, 2021
Cited by 156Open Access
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Abstract

Anti-programmed cell death-1 (PD-1)/programmed cell death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) antibodies are currently used in the clinic to interupt the PD-1/PD-L1 immune checkpoint, which reverses T cell dysfunction/exhaustion and shows success in treating cancer. Here, we report a histone demethylase inhibitor, 5-carboxy-8-hydroxyquinoline (IOX1), which inhibits tumour histone demethylase Jumonji domain-containing 1A (JMJD1A) and thus downregulates its downstream β-catenin and subsequent PD-L1, providing an antibody-independent paradigm interrupting the PD-1/PD-L1 checkpoint. Synergistically, IOX1 inhibits cancer cells' P-glycoproteins (P-gp) through the JMJD1A/β-catenin/P-gp pathway and greatly enhances doxorubicin (DOX)-induced immune-stimulatory immunogenic cell death. As a result, the IOX1 and DOX combination greatly promotes T cell infiltration and activity and significantly reduces tumour immunosuppressive factors. Their liposomal combination reduces the growth of various murine tumours, including subcutaneous, orthotopic, and lung metastasis tumours, and offers a long-term immunological memory function against tumour rechallenging. This work provides a small molecule-based potent cancer chemo-immunotherapy.


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