posted on 2025-02-18, 13:34authored byJiaqi You, Jie Shen, Wenwen Liu, Juan Zhou, Yimin Yu, Chengyu Liu, Feng Wang, Ang Li, Jianou Qiao
Lung cancer is one of the most common cancers and is
the leading
cause of cancer death. Recent studies have shown that high potassium
ion concentrations in the lung cancer tumor microenvironment (TME)
can inhibit antitumor immunity through the induction of tumor-associated
macrophages (TAMs) into the M2-like phenotype. Given that crown ethers
can specifically bind to potassium ions, we constructed a biomimetic
pH-sensitive nanoparticle system that uses a liposome encapsulating
crown ether as a core drug and the lung cancer cell membrane was employed
as the outer coating (CCM-LP@crown-ether). CCM-LP@crown-ether could
remove potassium ions and skew M2 macrophages toward the M1-like phenotype
in a pH-dependent manner, which enhanced the ability of macrophages
to phagocytose and induce tumor cell apoptosis in vitro. Intravenous
injection of CCM-LP@crown-ether targeted and cleared specific potassium
ions in the tumor and showed good biosafety. Importantly, CCM-LP@crown-ether
increased the M1/M2 ratio, reduced MDSC infiltration, and promoted
the function and quantification of CD8+ T cells in the tumor microenvironment
after intravenous administration, which restored antitumor immunity
and effectively inhibited tumor growth in vivo. Furthermore, CCM-LP@crown-ether
achieved an enhanced antitumor effect in vivo when combined with an
anti-PD-1 antibody (α-PD-1) and prolonged the survival time
of tumor-bearing mice. Overall, CCM-LP@crown-ether demonstrated the
potential for clinical applications in lung cancer immunotherapy.