Intraperitoneal Co-Delivery of Claudin18.2×41BB and EpCAM×CD3 Bispecific Antibodies via mRNA-LNPs Synergistically Suppresses Gastric Cancer Peritoneal Metastasis Through T Cell Co-Activation.
1/5 보강
[INTRODUCTIONS] Gastric cancer with peritoneal metastasis (GCPM) carries a poor prognosis, constrained by inadequate drug delivery, systemic toxicity, and an immunosuppressive microenvironment.
- p-value P<0.001
APA
Che J, Guo YY, et al. (2026). Intraperitoneal Co-Delivery of Claudin18.2×41BB and EpCAM×CD3 Bispecific Antibodies via mRNA-LNPs Synergistically Suppresses Gastric Cancer Peritoneal Metastasis Through T Cell Co-Activation.. International journal of nanomedicine, 21, 577606. https://doi.org/10.2147/IJN.S577606
MLA
Che J, et al.. "Intraperitoneal Co-Delivery of Claudin18.2×41BB and EpCAM×CD3 Bispecific Antibodies via mRNA-LNPs Synergistically Suppresses Gastric Cancer Peritoneal Metastasis Through T Cell Co-Activation.." International journal of nanomedicine, vol. 21, 2026, pp. 577606.
PMID
41884275 ↗
Abstract 한글 요약
[INTRODUCTIONS] Gastric cancer with peritoneal metastasis (GCPM) carries a poor prognosis, constrained by inadequate drug delivery, systemic toxicity, and an immunosuppressive microenvironment. We developed E3C4, a single mRNA-lipid nanoparticle (LNP) co-encoding EpCAM×CD3 and Claudin18.2×41BB bispecific antibodies (BsAbs), to achieve localized dual-antigen T cell co-activation against GCPM.
[METHODS] E3C4 was prepared by co-encapsulating mΨ-modified mRNAs using ionizable lipids. Functional characterization included surface plasmon resonance (SPR) for binding affinity, T cell-dependent cytotoxicity (TDCC), and 4-1BB reporter assays. In vivo efficacy was evaluated in PBMC-humanized mice bearing subcutaneous or orthotopic NCI-N87 tumors. Immune infiltration and cytokine release were analyzed via flow cytometry and ELISA. Safety was assessed in C57BL/6J mice through acute and repeated-dose toxicity studies.
[RESULTS] Consequently, E3C4 exhibited optimal particle size and encapsulation efficiency. SPR confirmed high affinity for both BsAbs (KD ~10 M). Synergistic T cell activation achieved 80.9% cytotoxicity in vitro, significantly surpassing EpCAM×CD3 alone (29.1%, P<0.001). In subcutaneous models, 3 μg E3C4 induced 98.5% tumor growth inhibition with enhanced T cell infiltration and granzyme B expression. Intraperitoneal delivery enabled 96.4% tumor-localized expression, yielding superior efficacy over recombinant BsAbs in orthotopic models. E3C4 showed no mortality or cytokine release syndrome, with only transient elevations in IL-6, AST and ALT, as well as a >10% body weight loss that resolved within 2 weeks. The maximum tolerated dose exceeded the therapeutic dose by >200-fold.
[CONCLUSION] E3C4 constitutes a localized, synergistic platform that enables dual-antigen T cell co-activation within the peritoneal cavity. This approach maximizes antitumor efficacy while circumventing systemic toxicity, offering a novel immunotherapeutic strategy for GCPM.
[METHODS] E3C4 was prepared by co-encapsulating mΨ-modified mRNAs using ionizable lipids. Functional characterization included surface plasmon resonance (SPR) for binding affinity, T cell-dependent cytotoxicity (TDCC), and 4-1BB reporter assays. In vivo efficacy was evaluated in PBMC-humanized mice bearing subcutaneous or orthotopic NCI-N87 tumors. Immune infiltration and cytokine release were analyzed via flow cytometry and ELISA. Safety was assessed in C57BL/6J mice through acute and repeated-dose toxicity studies.
[RESULTS] Consequently, E3C4 exhibited optimal particle size and encapsulation efficiency. SPR confirmed high affinity for both BsAbs (KD ~10 M). Synergistic T cell activation achieved 80.9% cytotoxicity in vitro, significantly surpassing EpCAM×CD3 alone (29.1%, P<0.001). In subcutaneous models, 3 μg E3C4 induced 98.5% tumor growth inhibition with enhanced T cell infiltration and granzyme B expression. Intraperitoneal delivery enabled 96.4% tumor-localized expression, yielding superior efficacy over recombinant BsAbs in orthotopic models. E3C4 showed no mortality or cytokine release syndrome, with only transient elevations in IL-6, AST and ALT, as well as a >10% body weight loss that resolved within 2 weeks. The maximum tolerated dose exceeded the therapeutic dose by >200-fold.
[CONCLUSION] E3C4 constitutes a localized, synergistic platform that enables dual-antigen T cell co-activation within the peritoneal cavity. This approach maximizes antitumor efficacy while circumventing systemic toxicity, offering a novel immunotherapeutic strategy for GCPM.
🏷️ 키워드 / MeSH 📖 같은 키워드 OA만
- Animals
- Stomach Neoplasms
- Antibodies
- Bispecific
- Humans
- Epithelial Cell Adhesion Molecule
- Mice
- Peritoneal Neoplasms
- T-Lymphocytes
- Cell Line
- Tumor
- Nanoparticles
- CD3 Complex
- Inbred C57BL
- RNA
- Messenger
- Claudins
- Lymphocyte Activation
- Female
- 41BB
- CD3
- EpCAM
- Claudin18.2
- T cell co-activation
… 외 4개
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