An ultrasound-driven immune-boosting molecular machine for systemic tumor suppression

Sci Adv. 2021 Oct 22;7(43):eabj4796. doi: 10.1126/sciadv.abj4796. Epub 2021 Oct 20.

Abstract

Exploring facile and effective therapeutic modalities for synergistically controlling primary tumor and metastasis remains a pressing clinical need. Sonodynamic therapy (SDT) offers the possibility of noninvasively eradicating local solid tumors, but lacks antimetastatic activity because of its limited ability in generating systemic antitumor effect. Here, we exploited a previously unidentified ultrasound-driven “molecular machine,” DYSP-C34 (C34 for short), with multiple attractive features, emerging from preferential tumor accumulation, potent ultrasound-triggered cytotoxicity, and intrinsic immune-boosting capacity. Driven by the ultrasound, C34 functioned not only as a tumor cell killing reagent but also as an immune booster that could potentiate robust adaptive antitumor immunity by directly stimulating dendritic cells, resulting in the eradication of the primary solid tumor along with the inhibition of metastasis. This molecular machine, C34, rendered great promise to achieve systemic treatment against cancer via unimolecule-mediated SDT.