| Literature DB >> 26633462 |
Janice Kim1, Robert R Hall2, Maciej S Lesniak3, Atique U Ahmed4.
Abstract
Oncolytic virotherapy for cancer is an innovative therapeutic option where the ability of a virus to promote cell lysis is harnessed and reprogrammed to selectively destroy cancer cells. Such treatment modalities exhibited antitumor activity in preclinical and clinical settings and appear to be well tolerated when tested in clinical trials. However, the clinical success of oncolytic virotherapy has been significantly hampered due to the inability to target systematic metastasis. This is partly due to the inability of the therapeutic virus to survive in the patient circulation, in order to target tumors at distant sites. An early study from various laboratories demonstrated that cells infected with oncolytic virus can protect the therapeutic payload form the host immune system as well as function as factories for virus production and enhance the therapeutic efficacy of oncolytic virus. While a variety of cell lineages possessed potential as cell carriers, copious investigation has established stem cells as a very attractive cell carrier system in oncolytic virotherapy. The ideal cell carrier desire to be susceptible to viral infection as well as support viral infection, maintain immunosuppressive properties to shield the loaded viruses from the host immune system, and most importantly possess an intrinsic tumor homing ability to deliver loaded viruses directly to the site of the metastasis-all qualities stem cells exhibit. In this review, we summarize the recent work in the development of stem cell-based carrier for oncolytic virotherapy, discuss the advantages and disadvantages of a variety of cell carriers, especially focusing on why stem cells have emerged as the leading candidate, and finally propose a future direction for stem cell-based targeted oncolytic virotherapy that involves its establishment as a viable treatment option for cancer patients in the clinical setting.Entities:
Keywords: cell carrier; oncolytic virus; stem cell
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26633462 PMCID: PMC4690850 DOI: 10.3390/v7122921
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.048
Figure 1Comparison of modified virus behavior in healthy cells and tumor cells along with mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) and neural stem cells (NSCs). Virus modification inhibits the ability of virus replication in healthy cells, eliminating the potential of widespread infection upon oncolytic virotherapy injections. However, injected viruses rapidly replicate in tumor cells, causing lysis of tumor cells. This allows the virus to destroy malignant cells and spread throughout the tumor population.
Examination of cell lineages used as carriers for delivery of oncolytic viruses to malignancies. Advantages and disadvantages of each type of carrier are indexed, with citations of preclinical studies investigating these carriers listed adjacently.
| Type of Carrier | Advantages | Disadvantages | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Transformed Cancer Cells | |||
| Solid Tumors | Often stimulate antitumor immunity. | Large size limits which tumor forms they can treat. | [ |
| Hematopoietic and lymphoid tumors | Kinesis via the circulatory system. | Rapid proliferation rate can lead to | [ |
| Xenogeneic/allogeneic | Injected cells are destroyed, preventing | Immune response is profound, limits delivery because or side effects and rejection of injected cells. | [ |
| Immune Cells | |||
| T cells | Home to metastases. | Strong preference to be loaded with reoviruses. | [ |
| Activated T Cells | Increased ability to take up viruses. | Activation is lengthy and tedious. | [ |
| CIKs | Home to tumors. | Requires expansion of primary leukocytes using cytokines | [ |
| Progenitor Cells | |||
| Blood outgrowth endothelial cells | Very targeted delivery because of ability to become incorporated into tumor neovasculature | Cells are not immortal, new cells must be isolated from clinical samples. | [ |
| Mesenchymal Stem Cells | Migrate to the tumor tissue. | High amount of non-specific migration in some cancers. | [ |
| Neural Stem Cells | Specifically migrate to brain tumors. | Require stereotactical extraction of cells from the subventricular zone. | [ |
Figure 2Antibodies react to the injection of naked viruses, prohibiting viruses from reaching the tumor site because of filtration by the liver. Contrastingly, injections of stem cells carrying modified viruses evade antibodies and T Cells because of the low amount of transporters associated with antigen processing (TAP) in stem cells. Stem cell carriers are not filtered to the liver and home directly to the tumor site. Upon reaching the tumor, stem cell carriers act as replication factories for viruses, prompting the release of numerous viruses directly into the tumor.
Summary of preclinical trails using stem cells for oncolytic virotherapy treatments. Studies investigating mesenchymal stem cells are listed first, followed by studies examining neural stem cells. The type of virus loaded and cancer treated are catalogued. Results and citation of each preclinical trial are also included.
| Type of Stem Cell Carrier | Species of Origin | Type of Virus | Type of Cancer Treated | Result | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stromal cells | Human | Oncolytic Adenovirus | Pancreatic | Capsid modification leads to enhancement of therapeutic viral loading onto MSC-based cell carriers (Engineered 5/3 fiber chimerism adenoviruses enter MSCs at a 35-to 3310-fold rate compared to adenovirus 5 wild type capsid.) | [ |
| Bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells | Human | Osteocalcin promoter-directed Ad-hOC-E1 oncolytic adenovirus | Renal Cell Carcinoma | Injection of pharmaceutical inducible MSC carrying oncolytic adenovirus combined with vitamin D3 treatment induced effective viral delivery to RCC tumors and significant tumor regression. These were significantly greater than those of injection of carrier-free Ad-hOC-E1. | [ |
| Bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells | Human | Adenovirus carrying the | Glioblastoma | MSCs home to tumors in murine models. MSCs loaded with therapeutic virus injected intra-arterially prolonged median survival of animals. | [ |
| Bone marrow-derived mesenchymal progenitor cells | Human | Adenovirus Ad5/3 | Ovarian | MSCs home to ovarian tumors, allow virus to replicate, and prolong survival | [ |
| Bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells | Human | Adenovirus Delta24-RGD | Glioblastoma | Carotid injections of MSCs loaded with therapeutic eradicated tumors, halted tumor growth, and prolonged survival. (Increase in median survival from 42 days to 75.5 days in murine | [ |
| Mesenchymal stem cells derived from ovarian cancer patients (ovMSC) | Human | Measles | Ovarian | Migration of ovMSCs to tumors was comparable to that of MSCs derived from healthy donors. Delivery of virus | [ |
| Bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells | Human | Measles | Hepatocellular Carcinoma | Systemically delivered MSCs homed to HCC tumors implanted in the liver. MSCs effectively transferred MVs via heterofusion. The therapy inhibited tumor growth in passively immunized SCID mice, which did not occur upon naked MV injections. | [ |
| Immortalized fetal brain-derived neural stem cells | Human | Adenoviral vector CRAd-S-pk7 | Glioblastoma Multiforme | Viral loaded NSC therapy, when delivered prior to, rather than after conventional therapy prompts 30% longer survival in mice with autotrophic patient-derived glioma compared to application after therapy. (Adenoviral loaded NSC injections in conjunction with XRT-TMZ treatments increased median murine survival 46% compared to XRT-TMZ alone.) | [ |
| Immortalized neural stem cell type HB1.F3-CD derived from fetal brain | Human | Adenoviral vector CRAd-S-pk7 | Glioblastoma Multiforme | Virus delivered via NSC carrier was localized within the injected hemisphere. NSC carrier cells handed off the therapeutic virus to tumors within 5 days post-injection | [ |
| Human fetal brain-derived neural Stem Cells | Human | Adenovirus | Glioblastoma Multiforme | NSCs are superior viral cell carriers to MSCs in targeting glioma. NSCs release virus at an amount a log higher than MSCs ( | [ |