Enhancing Antitumor Efficacy of MUC1 mRNA Nano-Vaccine byCTLA-4 siRNA-Mediated Immune Checkpoint Modulation inTriple Negative Breast Cancer Mice Model

🔬 Introduction

Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) is one of the most aggressive and treatment-resistant subtypes of breast cancer. Unlike other forms, TNBC lacks estrogen, progesterone, and HER2 receptors, limiting targeted therapy options and increasing reliance on chemotherapy.
Recent advances in RNA-based cancer vaccines and immunotherapy have opened new therapeutic pathways. However, most mRNA vaccines focus only on antigen delivery and do not address immune suppression within the tumor microenvironment.
This study introduces an advanced dual-delivery nanolipid-exosome (NLE) platform designed to both stimulate tumor-specific immunity and overcome immune checkpoint inhibition.


🎯 Objective

The goal of this research was to develop a multifunctional nano-vaccine capable of:

  • Delivering MUC1 mRNA (tumor-associated antigen)

  • Silencing CTLA-4, a key immune checkpoint molecule

The hypothesis: combining antigen expression with immune checkpoint gene silencing would significantly enhance antitumor immunity in a TNBC mouse model.


🧪 Methodology

🧫 Nano-Vaccine Design

The platform combines:

  • ~90% endogenous exosomal membrane

  • ~10% synthetic lipid components

Key features:

  • Encapsulation of MUC1-encoding mRNA

  • Co-delivery of CTLA-4-targeting siRNA

  • Mannose surface modification for dendritic cell targeting

  • High encapsulation efficiency (~89.5%)

  • Stable nanoparticle size (70–150 nm)

🐭 Experimental Evaluation

The system was tested:

  • In vitro for stability and cytocompatibility

  • In vivo in a TNBC mouse model

Immune analyses included:

  • CD8+ T-cell infiltration (flow cytometry)

  • IFN-γ production (ELISPOT)

  • In vivo cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) assay


📊 Key Findings

💪 Enhanced Immune Activation

The dual nano-vaccine significantly increased:

  • Tumor-infiltrating CD8+ T cells

  • IFN-γ secretion

  • Antigen-specific CTL responses

🔗 Synergistic Combination Effect

The combination therapy (MUC1 mRNA + CTLA-4 siRNA) demonstrated significantly stronger tumor suppression compared to monotherapy.

Mechanism:

  • MUC1 mRNA → activates tumor-specific T cells

  • CTLA-4 silencing → removes immune inhibition

🛡️ Safety & Biocompatibility

  • Minimal cytotoxicity

  • Favorable biodistribution

  • Stable nanoparticle characteristics

  • Low systemic toxicity


🚀 Innovation & Scientific Impact

This study introduces:

  • A biomimetic nanolipid–exosome hybrid system

  • Dual RNA delivery (antigen + immune modulation)

  • Targeted dendritic cell activation

  • Potentially reduced systemic toxicity compared to antibody-based checkpoint inhibitors

The platform is modular and adaptable for future RNA-based cancer therapies.


🔮 Future Perspectives

Further research is required to:

  • Evaluate long-term immune memory

  • Assess repeated-dose safety

  • Study effects on Tregs and MDSCs

  • Validate in advanced preclinical and clinical models


🧾 Conclusion

The dual MUC1 mRNA and CTLA-4 siRNA nano-vaccine represents a next-generation immunotherapeutic strategy for triple-negative breast cancer.
By integrating targeted antigen delivery with immune checkpoint gene silencing, this approach enhances cytotoxic T-cell responses and helps overcome tumor immune resistance.
This biomimetic RNA nano-platform shows strong translational and clinical potential.


📄 Full Article Reference

Title: Enhancing Antitumor Efficacy of MUC1 mRNA Nano-Vaccine by CTLA-4 siRNA-Mediated Immune Checkpoint Modulation in Triple Negative Breast Cancer Mice Model
Journal: International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 2025
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms26178448

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