Covalent tumor anchoring spatially orchestrates antitumor immunity
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Protein immunotherapies can elicit potent tumor rejection, but reversible target engagement, incomplete tumor retention, and systemic leakage often erode spatial control. Here, we develop covalently anchored tumor immunotherapeutic proteins (CATIPs), a modular platform that uses proximity-enabled covalent chemistry to immobilize immune cues on tumor-cell surfaces after intratumoral administration. CATIPs combine tumor-targeting nanobodies with payloads for T cell engagement, co-stimulation, and cytokine support. In human PBMC-reconstituted NSG mice, CATIPs completely eradicated treated EGFR-positive tumors, outperforming matched non-covalent proteins while limiting redistribution, systemic T cell activation, cytokine release, xGVHD-associated morbidity, and on-target, off tumor toxicity. In immunocompetent melanoma models, CATIPs remodeled the tumor microenvironment, expanded antigen-specific CD8 + T cells, induced antigen-restricted abscopal control, and generated durable protection against local and metastatic rechallenge. CATIP-engineered tumor cells further functioned as whole-cell vaccines. Thus, covalent tumor anchoring converts local protein delivery into tumor-surface immune programming, enabling systemic, tumor-specific, durable antitumor immunity while limiting systemic immunopathology.