For effective targeted therapy of cancer with chemotherapy-loaded nanoparticles (NPs), antigens that are selective for cancer cells should be targeted to minimise off-tumour toxicity. Human leukocyte antigens (HLAs) are attractive cancer targets as they can present peptides from tumour-selective proteins on the cell surface, which can be recognised by T cells via T cell receptors (TCRs). In this study, docetaxel-loaded polymeric NPs were conjugated to recombinant affinity-enhanced TCRs to target breast cancer cells presenting a tumour-selective peptide-HLA complex. The TCR-conjugated nanoparticles enabled enhanced delivery of docetaxel and induced cell death through tumour-specific peptide-HLA targeting. These in vitro data demonstrate the potential of targeting tumour-restricted peptide-HLA epitopes using high affinity TCR-conjugated nanoparticles, representing a novel treatment strategy to deliver therapeutic drugs specifically to cancer cells. This journal is
CITATION STYLE
McDaid, W. J., Lissin, N., Pollheimer, E., Greene, M., Leach, A., Smyth, P., … Scott, C. J. (2021). Enhanced target-specific delivery of docetaxel-loaded nanoparticles using engineered T cell receptors. Nanoscale, 13(35), 15010–15020. https://doi.org/10.1039/d1nr04001d
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