| Literature DB >> 25954743 |
Assia L Angelova1, Karsten Geletneky2, Jürg P F Nüesch1, Jean Rommelaere1.
Abstract
Oncolytic virotherapy of cancer is among the innovative modalities being under development and especially promising for targeting tumors, which are resistant to conventional treatments. Presently, at least a dozen of viruses, belonging to nine different virus families, are being tested within the frames of various clinical studies in cancer patients. Continuously growing preclinical evidence showing that the autonomous rat parvovirus H-1 (H-1PV) is able to kill tumor cells that resist conventional treatments and to achieve a complete cure of various human tumors in animal models argues for its inclusion in the arsenal of oncolytic viruses with an especially promising bench to bedside translation potential. Oncolytic parvovirus safe administration to humans relies on the intrinsic preference of these agents for quickly proliferating, metabolically, and biochemically disturbed tumor versus normal cells (tumor selectivity or oncotropism). The present review summarizes and discusses (i) preclinical evidence of H-1PV innocuousness for normal cells and healthy tissues in vitro and in animals, respectively, (ii) toxicological assessments of H-1PV mono- or combined therapy in tumor-bearing virus-permissive animal models, as well as (iii) historical results of experimental infection of human cancer patients with H-1PV. Altogether, these data argue against a risk of H-1PV inducing significant toxic effects in human patients. This highly favorable safety profile allowed the translation of H-1PV preclinical research into a Phase I/IIa clinical trial being currently in progress.Entities:
Keywords: oncolytic virotherapy of cancer; oncolytic viruses; oncoselectivity; oncotropism; parvovirus H-1; preclinical assessment; safety profile; toxicological studies
Year: 2015 PMID: 25954743 PMCID: PMC4406089 DOI: 10.3389/fbioe.2015.00055
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Bioeng Biotechnol ISSN: 2296-4185
Figure 1Direct and indirect anti-tumor effects of oncolytic viruses (OVs). Normal cells resist OV infection because of viral life-cycle blockage prior to the induction of cytopathic effects. In contrast, OVs can disturb at least three cell types within the tumor. Infected cancer cells undergo an immunogenic type of death (direct oncolysis), which is sometimes (e.g., figure) but not always accompanied by virus production; this oncolysis leads to the activation of various immune cells (green), irrespective of their direct virus infection, thereby priming anti-cancer immune responses. Furthermore, the (abortive) OV infection of immune and endothelial cells inside the tumor results in cytotoxic cytokine production and anti-vascular/angiogenic effects, respectively, which both contribute to virus-mediated oncolysis in an indirect way. Uninfected tumor cells can also serve as targets for these indirect oncolytic effects.
Figure 2Characteristics of H-1 parvovirus. (A) In silico model of H-1PV capsid surface showing the two, three, and fivefold axes of symmetry (Allaume et al., 2012). (B) Simplified viral gene expression map. The viral single-stranded (ss) DNA genome ends in unique palindromic sequences (Pal), which serve as self-priming origins of replication for the synthesis of double-stranded replication forms/transcription templates. Transcription is controlled by the P4 and P38 promoters that are indicated by arrows and direct expression of non-structural (NS) and capsid (VP) proteins, respectively. (C) Simplified scheme of the viral life-cycle depicting the main steps leading to virus production and induction of cytopathic effects (CPE). Known and putative oncogenic transformation-stimulated steps are indicated by full and dashed red circles, respectively.
Figure 3Putative cell determinants of PV oncoselectivity. Indicated steps of the PV life-cycle (rectangles) were shown to be controlled by cellular factors (circles) known to be regulated at gene amplification, expression, and functional levels by cell proliferation (blue) and oncogenic transformation (red). The list of factors is not exhaustive and exemplifies candidate mediators of the enhanced permissiveness of neoplastic cells for PV infection. Evidence of the contribution of these factors to PV oncotropism is experimental for a few of them (PDK1, PKCη, Ets, ATF, Raf-1) but circumstantial for the others. For more details, see main text (pp. 4–5). CDK2, cyclin-dependent kinase 2; PDK1, phosphoinositide-dependent kinase 1; PKC, protein kinase C; Rdx, radixin; HMGB1, high-mobility group box protein 1; ATM, ataxia-telangiectasia mutated protein; Raf-1, rapidly accelerated fibrosarcoma-1 protein; XPO1, exportin-1; PKB, protein kinase B; E2F, transcription factor E2F; Ets, E26 transformation-specific transcription factor; ATF, activating transcription factor; CKII, casein kinase II; TPM, tropomyosin; CTSB, cathepsin B.
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| Transformed/tumor cells (Tu) | Normal cells (N) | Tu versus N sensitization to H-1PV infection | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Spontaneously transformed human amnion | Normal human amnion | CPE in Tu No toxicity in N | Toolan and Ledinko ( |
| SV40-transformed human (fore)skin fibroblasts | Normal human (fore)skin fibroblasts | Efficient Tu killing: active DNA and protein synthesis; abundant NS1 phosphorylation; productive Tu infection Minor cytotoxicity, no killing and abortive N infection | Chen et al. ( |
| Squamous cell carcinoma-derived human keratinocytes | Normal human breast skin keratinocytes | ||
| Breast carcinoma-derived human epithelial cells | Normal human mammary gland epithelial cells | ||
| Hepatoma-derived human cells | Normal human hepatocytes | Tu killing through apoptosis No NS1 expression and no N killing | Moehler et al. ( |
| Glioma-derived human cells | Normal human astrocytes and glia | Cathepsin-mediated Tu death Low NS1 levels and no N killing | Di Piazza et al. ( |
| EBV-transformed and lymphoma/leukemia-derived human immune cells | Normal human and rat immune cells | Efficient Tu killing and productive Tu infection Retained N viability and abortive N infection | Moehler et al. ( |
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CPE, cytopathic effect; EBV, Epstein–Barr virus.
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| Tumor (Tu) | H-1PV adm. route | Normal tissue (N) | Tu versus N sensitization to H-1PV infection | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rat/human pancreatic carcinoma | i.t. | Normal pancreatic and other visceral tissues | Long-lasting H-1PV expression in Tu Transient H-1PV expression in N; no virus-induced changes in blood, liver, and kidney clinical parameters | Angelova et al. ( |
| Rat/human glioma | i.t. | Normal brain and other visceral tissues | Late H-1PV expression in residual Tu; Tu-dependent H-1PV production in brain | Di Piazza et al. ( |
| i.v. | ||||
| i.n. | Transient virus genome detection, no late virus expression and no pathological alterations in N | |||
| Human cervical carcinoma | i.t. | Normal visceral tissues | Selective NS1 expression in Tu No weight loss or other side effects | Li et al. ( |
| Immunocomp. Tu-free rats | i.v. | Visceral tissues | Broad organ distribution and time-dependent decrease of H-1PV genomes | Geletneky et al. ( |
| i.c. | ||||
No or minimal and reversible toxicological changes |
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i.t., intratumoral; i.v., intravenous; i.n., intranasal; i.c., intracerebral.
H-1PV-induced suppression of human tumor xenografts in mouse models.
| Tumor entity (tumor model) | H-1PV-induced anti-tumor effects | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Breast carcinoma (HMEC HBL100 cells s.c. implanted in nude mice) | Tumor growth suppression and complete remission with no recurrence in 50% of the virus-treated animals | Dupressoir et al. ( |
| Cervical carcinoma (HeLa cells s.c. implanted in SCID mice) | Complete tumor regression after high virus dose application | Faisst et al. ( |
| Burkitt lymphoma (Namalwa cells s.c. implanted in SCID mice) | Efficient tumor regression and necrosis. Virus-induced effects also after application at late disease stages | Angelova et al. ( |
| Gastric carcinoma (SGC-7901 cells or MKN28, SGC7901, MKN45 cells transfected with NS1-expressing plasmid, s.c. implanted in nude mice) | Tumor growth suppression by | Zhang et al. ( |
| Pancreatic carcinoma | H-1PV dose-dependent tumor growth delay | Angelova et al. ( |
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HMEC, human mammary epithelial cells; s.c., subcutaneously; PDAC, pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma.
Safety of H-1PV-based combinatorial treatments.
| Tumor entity | H-1PV combination partner | Cooperative anti-neoplastic effects | Oncoselectivity | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pancreatic carcinoma | Gemcitabine | Enhanced effectiveness of combinative treatment in | No H-1PV-induced changes in blood-borne bone marrow activity | Angelova et al. ( |
Unaffected kidney and liver functions | ||||
| VPA | Effective H-1PV dose | Selective tumor targeting No weight loss | Li et al. ( | |
| Cervical carcinoma | VPA | Synergistic tumor growth arrest | No other signs of toxicity |
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VPA, valproic acid.
Figure 4Preclinical evidence of H-1PV safety.