Yan Xu, Yangzhe Wu, Jianlei Hao, Li Lin, Changliang Shan, Zhinan Yin, Jingxia Li, Yanyun Jing, Fengyi Mai, Tianfeng Chen, Ting Liu, Yi Hu, Jiawei Li, Junyi He, Yan Chen, and Xin Dong
Immune cell therapy presents a paradigm for the treatment of malignant tumors. Human Vγ9Vδ2 T cells, a subset of peripheral γδ T cells, have been shown to have promising anti-tumor activity. However, new methodology on how to achieve a stronger anti-tumor activity of Vγ9Vδ2 T cells is under continuous investigation. In this work, we used selenium nanoparticles (SeNPs) to strengthen the anti-tumor cytotoxicity of Vγ9Vδ2 T cells. We found SeNPs pretreated γδ T cells had significantly stronger cancer killing and tumor growth inhibition efficacy when compared with γδ T cells alone. Simultaneously, SeNPs pretreatment could significantly upregulate the expression of cytotoxicity related molecules including NKG2D, CD16, and IFN-γ, meanwhile, downregulate PD-1 expression of γδ T cells. Importantly, we observed that SeNPs promoted tubulin acetylation modification in γδ T cells through interaction between microtubule network and lysosomes since the latter is the primary resident station of SeNPs shown by confocal visualization. In conclusion, SeNPs could significantly potentiate anti-tumor cytotoxicity of Vγ9Vδ2 T cells, and both cytotoxicity related molecules and tubulin acetylation were involved in fine-tuning γδ T cell toxicity against cancer cells. Our present work demonstrated a new strategy for further enhancing anti-tumor cytotoxicity of human Vγ9Vδ2 T cells by using SeNPs-based nanotechnology, not gene modification, implicating SeNPs-based nanotechnology had a promising clinical perspective in the γδ T cell immunotherapy for malignant tumors.