| Literature DB >> 28536351 |
Michael Karl Melzer1, Arturo Lopez-Martinez2, Jennifer Altomonte3.
Abstract
Oncolytic viruses have gained much attention in recent years, due, not only to their ability to selectively replicate in and lyse tumor cells, but to their potential to stimulate antitumor immune responses directed against the tumor. Vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV), a negative-strand RNA virus, is under intense development as an oncolytic virus due to a variety of favorable properties, including its rapid replication kinetics, inherent tumor specificity, and its potential to elicit a broad range of immunomodulatory responses to break immune tolerance in the tumor microenvironment. Based on this powerful platform, a multitude of strategies have been applied to further improve the immune-stimulating potential of VSV and synergize these responses with the direct oncolytic effect. These strategies include: 1. modification of endogenous virus genes to stimulate interferon induction; 2. virus-mediated expression of cytokines or immune-stimulatory molecules to enhance anti-tumor immune responses; 3. vaccination approaches to stimulate adaptive immune responses against a tumor antigen; 4. combination with adoptive immune cell therapy for potentially synergistic therapeutic responses. A summary of these approaches will be presented in this review.Entities:
Keywords: adoptive cell therapy; immune-suppression; immunotherapy; oncolytic virus; vaccination; vesicular stomatitis virus
Year: 2017 PMID: 28536351 PMCID: PMC5423493 DOI: 10.3390/biomedicines5010008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomedicines ISSN: 2227-9059
Preclinical and clinical recombinant vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) vectors.
| Virus | Modification | Action | Murine Tumor Model | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| VSV IL-4 | Expression of IL-4 | Oncolytic | Melanoma | [ |
| VSV mIFNβ | Expression of IFNβ gene murine (m), human (h), rat (r) | Oncolytic | Mammary Adenocarcinoma | [ |
| VSV IL-12 | Expression of IL-12 | Oncolytic | Squamous Cell Carcinoma | [ |
| VSV ova | VSV expression of chicken ovalbumin | Oncolytic | Melanoma | [ |
| VSV hDCT | VSVmΔ51 expression of human DCT | Oncolytic | Melanoma | [ |
| VSV IL-23 | Expression of IL-23 | Oncolytic | Mammary Adenocarcinoma | [ |
| VSV IL-28 | Expression of IL-28 | Oncolytic | Melanoma | [ |
| VSV Flt3L | VSVmΔ51 expression of human Fl3L (growth factor DC’s activator) | Oncolytic | Lymphoma | [ |
| VSV hgp 100 | VSV expression of hgp100 a tumor-associated antigen | Oncolytic | Melanoma | [ |
| VSV IL-15 | VSVmΔ51 expression of IL-15 | Oncolytic | Colon Adenocarcinoma | [ |
| VSV H/F, | VSV Pseudotyped lacking G gene | Oncolytic | Myeloma | [ |
| VSV HIV-1 gp 160 | VSV expression of human immunodeficiency virus 1 | Oncolytic | Leukemia | [ |
| VSV rIFNβ | Expression of IFNβ gene | Oncolytic | Phase I | NCT01628640 |
| VSV IFNβ-NIS | Expression of the sodium iodine symporter (NIS) and human interferon β (IFNβ) | Oncolytic | Phase I | NCT02923466 |
Figure 1Challenges to adoptive cell therapy (ACT). The fate of adoptively transferred genetically engineered T cells (CAR/TCR) faces several hurdles. The size of the tumor can inversely correlate with the efficacy of ACT. Immature plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDCs), myeloid DCs (mDCs), Tregs and myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs), resulting in a general immunosuppressive tumor micromilieu, are also counterproductive to ACT responses.
Figure 2Identification of potential synergistic mechanisms mediated by ACT and VSV. Tumor debulking mediated by VSV potentially synergizes with better response in ACT. Those effects could be mediated by the following mechanisms: (1). VSV causes potent direct oncolysis to debulk large tumors; (2). Induction of necrosis by shutdown of tumor vasculature is mediated by attracted neutrophils to site of VSV inflammation; (3). Monocytic MDSCs (mMDSCs) are matured to a proinflammatory, tumor killing phenotype; (4). VSV infection causes strong induction of interferon (IFN) type I response by pDC maturation; (5). This IFN type I response may lead to recruitment of adoptively transferred T cells by chemokine signaling and type II IFN response of natural killer (NK) cells [141,142,143,144]; (6). The type I IFN response to VSV infection may lead to potentially reduced Treg attraction mediated by mDCs [145]; (7). TLR signaling-matured pDC can activate mDC, which is enhanced by IFNα [146,147]; (8,9). pDC prime a T cell response against viral antigens, as well against tumor antigens introduced to the viral genome [148]; (10). Matured mDC can take up released tumor antigens from dying tumor cells and prime a T cell response which is enhanced if there is a crosstalk between the dendritic cell subsets [148,149,150]. Black arrows within the inset boxes indicate differentiation; the green arrow indicates attraction; the T arrow represents inhibition.