PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Researchers at MIT develop new nanoparticles that stimulate the immune system to attack ovarian tumors

Targeted particles carrying the cytokine IL-12 can jump-start T cells, allowing them to clear tumors while avoiding side effects

2025-10-31
(Press-News.org) CAMBRIDGE, MA -- Cancer immunotherapy, which uses drugs that stimulate the body’s immune cells to attack tumors, is a promising approach to treating many types of cancer. However, it doesn’t work well for some tumors, including ovarian cancer.

To elicit a better response, MIT researchers have designed new nanoparticles that can deliver an immune-stimulating molecule called IL-12 directly to ovarian tumors. When given along with immunotherapy drugs called checkpoint inhibitors, IL-12 helps the immune system launch an attack on cancer cells.

Studying a mouse model of ovarian cancer, the researchers showed that this combination treatment could eliminate metastatic tumors in more than 80 percent of the mice. When the mice were later injected with more cancer cells, to simulate tumor recurrence, their immune cells remembered the tumor proteins and cleared them again.

“What’s really exciting is that we’re able to deliver IL-12 directly in the tumor space. And because of the way that this nanomaterial is designed to allow IL-12 to be borne on the surfaces of the cancer cells, we have essentially tricked the cancer into stimulating immune cells to arm themselves against that cancer,” says Paula Hammond, an MIT Institute Professor, MIT’s vice provost for faculty, and a member of the Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research.

Hammond and Darrell Irvine, a professor of immunology and microbiology at the Scripps Research Institute, are the senior authors of the new study, which appears today in Nature Materials. Ivan Pires PhD ’24, now a postdoc at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, is the lead author of the paper.

 

“Hitting the gas”

Most tumors express and secrete proteins that suppress immune cells, creating a microenvironment in which the immune response is weakened. One of the main players that can kill tumor cells are T cells, but they get sidelined or blocked by the cancer cells and are unable to attack the tumor. Checkpoint inhibitors are an FDA-approved treatment designed to take those brakes off the immune system by removing the immune-suppressing proteins so that T cells can mount an attack on tumor cells

For some cancers, including some types of melanoma and lung cancer, removing the brakes is enough to provoke the immune system into attacking cancer cells. However, ovarian tumors have many ways to suppress the immune system, so checkpoint inhibitors alone usually aren’t enough to launch an immune response.

“The problem with ovarian cancer is no one is hitting the gas. So, even if you take off the brakes, nothing happens,” Pires says.

IL-12 offers one way to “hit the gas,” by supercharging T cells and other immune cells. However, the large doses of IL-12 required to get a strong response can produce side effects due to generalized inflammation, such as flu-like symptoms (fever, fatigue, GI issues, headaches, and fatigue), as well as more severe complications such as liver toxicity and cytokine release syndrome — which can be so severe they may even lead to death.

In a 2022 study, Hammond’s lab developed nanoparticles that could deliver IL-12 directly to tumor cells, which allows larger doses to be given while avoiding the side effects seen when the drug is injected. However, these particles tended to release their payload all at once after reaching the tumor, which hindered their ability to generate a strong T cell response.

In the new study, the researchers modified the particles so that IL-12 would be released more gradually, over about a week. They achieved this by using a different chemical linker to attach IL-12 to the particles.

“With our current technology, we optimize that chemistry such that there’s a more controlled release rate, and that allowed us to have better efficacy,” Pires says.

The particles consist of tiny, fatty droplets known as liposomes, with IL-12 molecules tethered to the surface. For this study, the researchers used a linker called maleimide to attach IL-12 to the liposomes. This linker is more stable than the one they used in the previous generation of particles, which was susceptible to being cleaved by proteins in the body, leading to premature release.

To make sure that the particles get to the right place, the researchers coat them with a layer of a polymer called poly-L-glutamate (PLE), which helps them directly target ovarian tumor cells. Once they reach the tumors, the particles bind to the cancer cell surfaces, where they gradually release their payload and activate nearby T cells.

Disappearing tumors

In tests in mice, the researchers showed that the IL-12-carrying particles could effectively recruit and stimulate T cells that attack tumors. The cancer models used for these studies are metastatic, so tumors developed not only in the ovaries but throughout the peritoneal cavity, which includes the surface of the intestines, liver, pancreas, and other organs. Tumors could even be seen in the lung tissues.

First, the researchers tested the IL-12 nanoparticles on their own, and they showed that this treatment eliminated tumors in about 30 percent of the mice. They also found a significant increase in the number of T cells that accumulated in the tumor environment.

Then, the researchers gave the particles to mice along with checkpoint inhibitors. More than 80 percent of the mice that received this dual treatment were cured. This happened even when the researchers used models of ovarian cancer that are highly resistant to immunotherapy or to the chemotherapy drugs usually used for ovarian cancer.

Patients with ovarian cancer are usually treated with surgery followed by chemotherapy. While this may be initially effective, cancer cells that remain after surgery are often able to grow into new tumors. Establishing an immune memory of the tumor proteins could help to prevent that kind of recurrence.

In this study, when the researchers injected tumor cells into the cured mice five months after the initial treatment, the immune system was still able to recognize and kill the cells.

“We don’t see the cancer cells being able to develop again in that same mouse, meaning that we do have an immune memory developed in those animals,” Pires says.

The researchers are now working with MIT’s Deshpande Center for Technological Innovation to spin out a company that they hope could further develop the nanoparticle technology. In a study published earlier this year, Hammond’s lab reported a new manufacturing approach that should enable large-scale production of this type of nanoparticle.

###

The research was funded by the National Institutes of Health, the Marble Center for Nanomedicine, the Deshpande Center for Technological Innovation, the Ragon Institute of MGH, MIT, and Harvard, and the Koch Institute Support (core) Grant from the National Cancer Institute.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Opening the door to a vaccine for multiple childhood infections

2025-10-31
A vaccine that tackles the bacteria that cause up to 200 million childhood infections every year could be possible, experts say. In the first study of its kind, an international team including those at the Wellcome Sanger Institute, the University of Oslo, the University of Oxford and the Shoklo Malaria Research Unit at Mahidol University in Thailand, analysed new and existing Haemophilus influenzae (H. influenzae) genomes, from global samples collected between 1962-2023. H. influenzae is a type of bacteria that can cause a range of infections that are widely treated with antibiotics, but ...

New clue to ALS and FTD: Faulty protein disrupts brain’s ‘brake’ system

2025-10-31
Protein TDP-43 malfunctions and disrupts the normal splicing of the KCNQ2 gene Mis-splicing of the gene causes neurons to fire too much, too easily in ALS and FTD  Study authors developed a new drug, which calmed overactive ALS neurons   CHICAGO --- A new Northwestern University study using patient nervous tissue and lab-grown human neurons has uncovered how a key disease protein, TDP-43, drives overactive nerve cells in the neurodegenerative diseases amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and frontotemporal dementia (FTD).  The findings not only explain a long-standing mystery of why nerve cells overfire ...

Detailed map of US air-conditioning usage shows who can beat the heat — and who can’t

2025-10-31
LAWRENCE — As climate change produces ever more heat waves, how many homes in the U.S. lack adequate cooling? Who’s most vulnerable to lethal temperatures, and exactly where do they live? A researcher at the University of Kansas has produced the most comprehensive and detailed map of air conditioning usage in the United States — data that can improve the understanding of AC access for public health officials, urban planners, emergency managers, economists, energy auditors, providers of social services, private industry and other stakeholders. The research appears today in the peer-reviewed journal Scientific ...

An electronic fiber for stretchable sensing

2025-10-31
The phrase ‘liquid metal’ may bring to mind something hazardous, like mercury or molten steel. But in the Laboratory of Photonic Materials and Fiber Devices (FIMAP) in EPFL’s School of Engineering, it simply means a mixture of indium and gallium that is nontoxic, remains liquid at room temperature, and shows great promise for developing electronic fibers for wearables and robotic sensors. Unfortunately, as FIMAP head Fabien Sorin explains, liquid metals are extremely difficult to process, and it’s especially hard to produce electronic fibers that combine high and stable conductivity with stretchability. Now, the lab has overcome this ...

New image captures spooky bat signal in the sky

2025-10-31
A spooky bat has been spotted flying over the European Southern Observatory’s (ESO’s) Paranal site in Chile, right in time for Halloween. Thanks to its wide field of view, the VLT Survey Telescope (VST) was able to capture this large cloud of cosmic gas and dust, whose mesmerising appearance resembles the silhouette of a bat. Located about 10 000 light-years away, this ‘cosmic bat’ is flying between the southern constellations of Circinus and Norma. Spanning an area of the sky equivalent to four full Moons, it looks as if it's trying to hunt the glowing spot above it for food.  This nebula is a stellar nursery, a vast cloud of gas and dust from ...

Cobalt single atom-phosphate functionalized reduced graphene oxide/perylenetetracarboxylic acid nanosheet heterojunctions for efficiently photocatalytic H2O2 production

2025-10-31
Hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) is ranked among the top 100 most important chemicals globally. Currently, the anthraquinone oxidation method is the primary method for industrial H2O2 production, yet it faces several major issues, including complex synthesis, high energy consumption. As a more sustainable and environmentally friendly alternative, the artificial photosynthesis of H2O2 from H2O and O2 using semiconductor photocatalysts driven by renewable solar energy has attracted significant attention. A key process in this approach is the two–electron oxygen reduction reaction (2e- ORR). However, most photocatalysts face limitations, ...

World-first study shows Australian marsupials contaminated with harmful ‘forever chemicals’

2025-10-31
New research has shown for the first time that Australian marsupials are contaminated with synthetic ‘forever chemicals’, which are linked to significant health impacts in other animals and humans. University of Melbourne researchers in the Australian Laboratory for Emerging Contaminants (ALEC) and the Melbourne Veterinary School measured the concentrations of human-made per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) in possums from the greater Melbourne region, with findings published today in ...

Unlocking the brain’s hidden drainage system

2025-10-30
How does the brain take out its trash? That is the job of the brain’s lymphatic drainage system, and efforts to understand how it works have pushed the boundaries of brain-imaging technologies. A new study in iScience by researchers at the Medical University of South Carolina reveals, for the first time in humans, evidence of a previously unrecognized hub in the brain’s lymphatic drainage system – the middle meningeal artery (MMA). Taking advantage of a NASA partnership that provided access to real-time MRI technologies originally developed to study how spaceflight affects fluid dynamics in the human brain, the MUSC research team, ...

Enhancing smoking cessation treatment for people living with HIV

2025-10-30
People living with HIV who smoke are currently more likely to die from lung cancer than from HIV-related causes. Two cancer control researchers at the Medical University of South Carolina’s Hollings Cancer Center are setting out to change that. With more than $3 million from the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute over five years, Alana Rojewski, Ph.D., and Katherine Sterba, Ph.D., both of the department of Public Health Sciences at MUSC, will build and sustain ENHANCE-TTS (ENgaging pHarmacists to AdvANCE Tobacco Treatment Service) delivery programs that promote smoking ...

Research spotlight: Mapping how gut neurons respond to bacteria, parasites and food allergy

2025-10-30
October 30, 2025 Allergies | Digestive Disorders | Research Ramnik Xavier, MD, PhD, of the Department of Molecular Biology at Massachusetts General Hospital, is the senior author of a paper published in Science, “Regional encoding of enteric nervous system responses to microbiota and type 2 inflammation.” Q: How would you summarize your study for a lay audience? The enteric nervous system (ENS) is a vast network of nerves built into the walls of the intestine. While it is well known for its role in regulating digestion and the movement of food through the intestine, researchers are learning that its influence ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Study reports on global trends in acute kidney injury– related mortality

Study reveals a potentially better way to optimize the timing for kidney transplant waitlisting

Transitional dialysis program in Texas decreased the use of emergency dialysis

Quality improvement intervention may help prevent deaths from metformin-associated lactic acid

Conservative care versus dialysis: model indicates which is best for individual patients with advanced chronic kidney disease

Coronary artery calcium may be a predictor for all-cause mortality, including medical conditions not related to heart health

Minimally invasive coronary calcium CT scans used to determine heart disease risk are effective at finding other potential health problems

High-impact clinical trials generate promising results for improving kidney health - part 3

Mass General Brigham researchers find PCSK9 inhibitor reduced risk of first heart attack, stroke

Triglyceride-lowering drug significantly reduced rate of acute pancreatitis in high-risk patients

Steatotic liver disease and cancer: From pathogenesis to therapeutic frontiers

SGLT2 inhibitors and kidney outcomes by glomerular filtration rate and albuminuria

Comprehensive analysis supports routine use of metabolic drug for people with all levels of kidney function

Temporary benefit for immune system in early HIV treatment, but dysregulation returns

Chronic kidney disease is now the ninth leading cause of death

Chronic kidney disease has more than doubled since 1990, now affecting nearly 800 million people worldwide

Participant experiences in a kidney failure care intervention in the navigate-kidney study

Community health worker support for Hispanic and Latino individuals receiving hemodialysis

Scientists unveil new strategies to balance farming and ecological protection in Northeast China

UT Health San Antonio scientist helps shape new traumatic brain injury guidelines

Rising nitrogen and rainfall could supercharge greenhouse gas emissions from the world’s largest grasslands

Study uncovers glomerular disease outcomes across the lifespan

Sotagliflozin outperforms dapagliflozin for reducing salt- sensitive hypertension and kidney injury in rats

Trial analysis reveals almost all adults with hypertensive chronic kidney disease would benefit from intensive blood pressure lowering

A husband’s self-esteem may protect against preterm births, study finds

Michigan State University's James Madison College receives over $1 million to launch civic education academy

White paper on recovering from burnout through mentoring released by University of Phoenix College of Doctoral Studies

Defunct Pennsylvania oil and gas wells may leak methane, metals into water

Kessler Foundation’s John DeLuca, PhD, honored with Reitan Clinical Excellence Award from National Academy of Neuropsychology

Discordance in creatinine- and cystatin C–based eGFR and clinical outcomes

[Press-News.org] Researchers at MIT develop new nanoparticles that stimulate the immune system to attack ovarian tumors
Targeted particles carrying the cytokine IL-12 can jump-start T cells, allowing them to clear tumors while avoiding side effects