Nattokinase-Mediated Regulation of Tumor Physical Microenvironment to Enhance Chemotherapy, Radiotherapy, and CAR-T Therapy of Solid Tumor

Yanxiang Zhang(Soochow University), Yanxiang Zhang(Soochow University), Pei Pei(Soochow University), Hailin Zhou(Soochow University), Yuyuan Xie(Soochow University), Yang Sai(Soochow University), Wenhao Shen(Soochow University), Lin Hu(Soochow University), Yujuan Zhang(Soochow University), Yujuan Zhang(Soochow University), Teng Liu(Soochow University), Kai Yang(Soochow University)
ACS Nano
April 14, 2023
Cited by 52

Abstract

The therapy of solid tumors is always hampered by the intrinsic tumor physical microenvironment (TPME) featured with compact and rigid extracellular matrix (ECM) microstructures. Herein, we introduce nattokinase (NKase), a thrombolytic healthcare drug, to comprehensively regulate the TPME for versatile enhancement of various therapy modalities. Intratumoral injection of NKase not only degrades the major ECM component fibronectin but also inhibits cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) in generating fibrosis, resulting in decreased tumor stiffness, enhanced perfusion, and hypoxia alleviation. The NKase-mediated regulation of the TPME significantly promotes the tumoral accumulation of therapeutic agents, leading to efficient chemotherapy without inducing side effects. Additionally, the enhancement of tumor radiotherapy based on radiosensitizers was also achieved by the pretreatment of intratumorally injected NKase, which could be ascribed to the elevated oxygen saturation level in NKase-treated tumors. Moreover, a xenografted human breast MDB-MA-231 tumor model is established to evaluate the influence of NKase on chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-T cell therapy, illustrating that the pretreatment of NKase could boost the infiltration of CAR-T cells into tumors and thus be a benefit for tumor inhibition. These findings demonstrate the great promise of the NKase-regulated TPME as a translational strategy for universal enhancement of therapeutic efficacy in solid tumors by various treatments.


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