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Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Environmental Sources Remediation Sign in to save

A Self-Cascade Penetrating Brain Tumor Immunotherapy Mediated by Near-Infrared II Cell Membrane-Disrupting Nanoflakes via Detained Dendritic Cells

ACS Nano 2024 102 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 75 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Yu-Jen Chen, Bhanu Nirosha Yalamandala, Ya‐Hui Lin, Thi My Hue Huynh, Wen‐Hsuan Chiang, Tsu‐Chin Chou, Heng-Wei Liu, Chieh‐Cheng Huang, Yu‐Jen Lu, Chi‐Shiun Chiang, Li‐An Chu, Shang‐Hsiu Hu

Summary

This study developed nanoparticle-based technology to treat aggressive brain tumors (glioblastoma) by penetrating deep into tumor tissue and activating the immune system against cancer cells. While not directly about microplastic pollution, it demonstrates that nanoparticles can cross brain barriers and influence immune responses. The research is relevant because it shows how tiny particles, including plastics, can access and affect the brain.

Body Systems

Immunotherapy can potentially suppress the highly aggressive glioblastoma (GBM) by promoting T lymphocyte infiltration. Nevertheless, the immune privilege phenomenon, coupled with the generally low immunogenicity of vaccines, frequently hampers the presence of lymphocytes within brain tumors, particularly in brain tumors. In this study, the membrane-disrupted polymer-wrapped CuS nanoflakes that can penetrate delivery to deep brain tumors via releasing the cell-cell interactions, facilitating the near-infrared II (NIR II) photothermal therapy, and detaining dendritic cells for a self-cascading immunotherapy are developed. By convection-enhanced delivery, membrane-disrupted amphiphilic polymer micelles (poly(methoxypoly(ethylene glycol)-benzoic imine-octadecane, mPEG-<i>b</i>-C18) with CuS nanoflakes enhances tumor permeability and resides in deep brain tumors. Under low-power NIR II irradiation (0.8 W/cm<sup>2</sup>), the intense heat generated by well-distributed CuS nanoflakes actuates the thermolytic efficacy, facilitating cell apoptosis and the subsequent antigen release. Then, the positively charged polymer after hydrolysis of the benzoic-imine bond serves as an antigen depot, detaining autologous tumor-associated antigens and presenting them to dendritic cells, ensuring sustained immune stimulation. This self-cascading penetrative immunotherapy amplifies the immune response to postoperative brain tumors but also enhances survival outcomes through effective brain immunotherapy.

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