| Literature DB >> 24782985 |
Zong Sheng Guo1, Zuqiang Liu1, David L Bartlett1.
Abstract
Oncolytic viruses (OVs) are novel immunotherapeutic agents whose anticancer effects come from both oncolysis and elicited antitumor immunity. OVs induce mostly immunogenic cancer cell death (ICD), including immunogenic apoptosis, necrosis/necroptosis, pyroptosis, and autophagic cell death, leading to exposure of calreticulin and heat-shock proteins to the cell surface, and/or released ATP, high-mobility group box 1, uric acid, and other damage-associated molecular patterns as well as pathogen-associated molecular patterns as danger signals, along with tumor-associated antigens, to activate dendritic cells and elicit adaptive antitumor immunity. Dying the right way may greatly potentiate adaptive antitumor immunity. The mode of cancer cell death may be modulated by individual OVs and cancer cells as they often encode and express genes that inhibit/promote apoptosis, necroptosis, or autophagic cell death. We can genetically engineer OVs with death-pathway-modulating genes and thus skew the infected cancer cells toward certain death pathways for the enhanced immunogenicity. Strategies combining with some standard therapeutic regimens may also change the immunological consequence of cancer cell death. In this review, we discuss recent advances in our understanding of danger signals, modes of cancer cell death induced by OVs, the induced danger signals and functions in eliciting subsequent antitumor immunity. We also discuss potential combination strategies to target cells into specific modes of ICD and enhance cancer immunogenicity, including blockade of immune checkpoints, in order to break immune tolerance, improve antitumor immunity, and thus the overall therapeutic efficacy.Entities:
Keywords: DAMPs; PAMP; antitumor immunity; autophagy; cross-presentation; immune tolerance; immunogenic cancer cell death; tumor-associated antigen
Year: 2014 PMID: 24782985 PMCID: PMC3989763 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2014.00074
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1Four key modes of cancer cell death and their immunogenicity. In classic apoptosis, the retention of plasma membrane integrity and the formation of apoptotic bodies render it an immunologically silent death mode, or non-immunogenic cell death. However, recent studies have shown that cancer cells treated with certain cytotoxic agents (some chemotherapeutic agents and oncolytic viruses) lead to the cell surface exposure of calreticulin (ecto-CRT) and heat-shock proteins (HSPs) prior to apoptosis, and other DAMPs released in the later phase of apoptosis, danger signals to DCs. This is immunogenic apoptosis. Cancer cells dying by necrosis/necroptosis or pyroptosis secrete pro-inflammatory cytokines and release their cytoplasmic content, including DAMPs (ATP, HMGB1, and uric acid, etc.), into the extracellular space. Some DAMPs (such as HMGB1) can be secreted through non-classical pathways (25). These later modes of cancer cell death are ICD. Drawings are modified and reprinted from Lamkanfi and Dixit (47), copyright 2010, with permission from Elsevier.
Oncolytic viruses lead to specific mode of immunogenic cell death and exposure/release of DAMPs/PAMPs.
| OV | DAMP/PAMP | Receptor | Type of cell death | Immunological functions | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ad5/3-D24-GM-CSF; CVB3; vvDD | ATP | P2Y2 and P2X7 | Necrosis, autophagic cell death, and immunogenic apoptosis | Function as a “find-me” signal, and cause NLRP3-inflammasome-based IL-1β production | ( |
| Ad5/3-D24-GM-CSF; CVB3 | Ecto-CRT (calreticulin) | CD91 | Immunogenic apoptosis (either pre-apoptotic, early or mid apoptotic surface exposure) or secondary necrosis | Function as an “eat-me” signal and it is a potent mediator of tumor immunogenicity crucial for elicidation of antitumor immunity | ( |
| Parvovirus H-1 (H-1PV) | HSPs: (HSP90, HSP70, Hsp72) | CD91, TLR2, TLR4, SREC1, and FEEL1 | Immunogenic apoptosis (surface exposure) or necrosis (passively released) | Surfaced-exposed HSP90 can mediate adaptive antitumor immunity, while secreted HSP90 can inhibit TGF-β1 activation; Leads to TAA-specific antitumor immunity | ( |
| ? (Not identified) | Histones | TLR9 | Apoptosis (cell surface exposure) or accidental necrosis (passively released) | Released histones can cause initiation of TLR9-MyD88-mediated inflammation | ( |
| Many OVs: Ad; HSV; MV; VV; H-1PV | HMGB1 | TLR2, TLR4, RAGE, and TIM3 | Immunogenic apoptosis; necrosis; autophagic cell death | Activate macrophages and DCs; recruit neutrophils; promote | ( |
| MV-eGFP | IL-6 | IL-6R and GP130 | Necroptosis | A cell type-specific endokine DAMP with potent pro-inflammatory activity | ( |
| Telomelysin (Ad) | Uric acid | P2Y6 | Autophagic cell death | Stimulate the production of inflammatory cytokines such as IL-1, TNF-α, and IL-6 and chemotactic factors for neutrophils such as IL-8/CXCL8 and S100A8/A9 | ( |
| Newcastle disease virus (NDV) | dsRNA and other PAMPs | TLR3; and by the cytoplasmic receptors MDA-5 and RIG-I | Immunogenic Apoptosis; autophagy | (1) Upregulation of HLA antigens and ICAM-1; (2) induction of type I IFNs and chemokines (CCL5 and CXCL10); (3) activate DCs and T effector cells but also to block Treg cells; (4) local therapy with oncolytic NDV induces inflammatory immune infiltrates in distant tumors, making them susceptible to systemic therapy | ( |
| Reovirus | The virus itself (PAMP) | Dendritic cells (DCs) | (Cancer cell independent mechanism) | Induce DC maturation and stimulate the production of the pro-inflammatory cytokines IFN-α, TNF-α, IL-12p70, and IL-6. Reovirus directly activates human DC and that reovirus-activated DCs stimulate innate killing by not only NK cells, but also T cells | ( |
Examples of viruses and viral genes modulating apoptosis, autophagy, and necroptosis.
| Virus | Gene | Type of action | Mechanism of action | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ad | E1A | AS | Associate with the pRb/p300 family and induce p53-dependent apoptosis | ( |
| E1B-19K | AI | Sequester pro-apoptotic Bcl-2-like proteins and p53; inhibit apoptosis triggered by numerous stimuli | ( | |
| E1B-55K | AI | Bind to p53 and functionally inactivates it | ( | |
| E3-6.7 | AI | Complexes with 10.4 and 14.5 resulting in downregulation of TRAIL receptors | ( | |
| HSV | ICP34.5 | ATI | Inhibit PKR signaling and directly bind to beclin-1 | ( |
| ICP34.5 | AI | IFN-mediated pathway; decrease elF-2α phosphorylation by PKR | ( | |
| Us3 | AI | Ser/Thr kinase that prevents virus-induced apoptosis | ( | |
| Us5 | AI | Cooperates with Us3 | ( | |
| VV | SPI-1 | Serpin, inhibit cell-cell fusion | ( | |
| SPI-2 | AI | Serpin, direct inhibitor of caspases | ( | |
| F1L | AI | Interact with the pro-apoptotic protein Bak and inhibit Bak activation | ( | |
| N1L | AI | Inhibit multiple pro-apoptotic Bcl-2-like proteins | ( | |
| MYXV | M11L | AI | Prevent the mitochondria from undergoing a permeability transition; inhibit apoptotic response of macrophages and monocytes | ( |
| MCMV | vIRA | NI | Target RIP1, RIP3, TRIF, and DAI; inhibit RIP3-dependent necrosis | ( |
| Influenza virus | M2 | ATI | Block autophagosome fusion with lysosomes | ( |
| NS1 | AI/ATS | Inhibit apoptosis and upregulate autophagy | ( | |
| Measles virus | H | AS | Induce apoptosis of HeLa cells via both extrinsic and intrinsic pathways | ( |
| Virion | ATS | Binding of virus to CD46 on cell surface induces autophagy | ( | |
| NDV | V | AI | Inhibit IFN response and apoptosis | ( |
AI, apoptosis inhibitor; AS, apoptosis stimulator; NI, necroptosis inhibitor; ATI, autophagy inhibitor; ATS, autophagy stimulator.