posted on 2025-05-02, 03:43authored byYan Zou, Shanshan Li, Yundong Li, Dongya Zhang, Meng Zheng, Bingyang Shi
Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is the most prevalent brain
tumor
that remains incurable up to now. The rapid advancement of immunotherapy
makes vaccines a promising therapeutic approach for GBM. However,
current vaccine platforms, such as peptides, dendritic cells, mRNA,
and viral vectors, are subject to limitations such as inadequate antigen
loading, insufficient immune system activation, ineffective vector
delivery, complicated fabrication process, and complex formulation.
Here, we developed a GBM tumor cell derived homologous exosomal nanovaccine
that does not need to carry any additional tumor antigens and leads
to the activation of antigen-presenting cells (APCs) in lymph nodes,
increasing the proportion of immune cells (matured dendritic cells,
cytotoxic T cells, and memory T cells) and in turn promoting the expression
of cytokines (TNF-α, IL-6, and IFN-γ), which effectively
stimulates innate immunity to trigger durable protective immunity
against tumor cell insult. Our nanovaccine platform possesses efficient
dual-targeting capability to lymph nodes and the brain. More importantly,
the developed exosomal nanovaccines protected 100% of treated mice
by inducing sustained and strong immunity against GL261-luc GBM tumor
cells, resulting in 100% mouse survival (8/8) up to 5 months. Our
nanovaccines also induced antitumor immune responses in the immunosuppressed
CT2A-luc GBM mouse model with greatly improved survival compared to
control mice. Exosomal nanovaccines also demonstrated effectiveness
in preventing brain metastasis in the B16F10-luc melanoma malignant
brain metastasis mouse model, and the mice showed notably improved
survival rates. Our simple and potent exosomes offer a versatile platform
for clinical translation as individualized vaccine therapy.