Breakthrough Cancer Therapy Uses Nanoparticles to Reactivate Tumor's Immune Defense

November 3, 2025
Breakthrough Cancer Therapy Uses Nanoparticles to Reactivate Tumor's Immune Defense
  • Researchers at Mass General Brigham are restoring the tumor cell’s own immune signaling by delivering cGAS mRNA via lipid nanoparticles to cancer cells, reactivating the cGAS-STING pathway to spur antitumor immunity.

  • This tumor-intrinsic strategy triggers immune responses including interferon production and activation of macrophages and dendritic cells, which then prime T cells to attack the cancer.

  • The work, led by Dr. Natalie Artzi on a multidisciplinary team, integrates molecular biology, immunology, nanotechnology and oncology to translate the concept into preclinical models.

  • The study builds on understanding tumor immune evasion and aims to counteract it by leveraging the tumor’s own signaling machinery.

  • The study was conducted in a mouse melanoma model and the findings are published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in 2025.

  • In mice, a single treatment slowed tumor growth, while the combination with additional therapies produced the strongest anti-tumor effect.

  • The paper and related materials are accessible via Mass General Brigham and PNAS pages, with the PNAS DOI 10.1073/pnas.2409556122.

  • The research team’s approach combines biology, immunology, nanotech and oncology to move from concept to preclinical validation.

  • The publication details Restoration of cGAS in tumor cells promoting antitumor immunity via transfer of tumor-cell generated cGAMP in the tumor microenvironment.

  • Overall, this work points toward future cancer therapies that harness the body's natural defense by manipulating cancer-cell signaling to enhance immune recognition.

  • Next steps include developing systemic delivery options and testing combinations with DNA-damaging chemotherapy or radiotherapy to boost cGAMP production and cGAS-STING signaling.

  • Researchers plan to refine systemic delivery to reach non-accessible or metastatic tumors and to explore combining with chemo or radiotherapy for greater efficacy.

Summary based on 5 sources


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Sources

Turning on an immune pathway in tumors could lead to their destruction

MIT News | Massachusetts Institute of Technology • Nov 3, 2025

Turning on an immune pathway in tumors could lead to their destruction




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