| Literature DB >> 29621357 |
Kseniya S Yurchenko1, Peipei Zhou2,3, Anna V Kovner1, Evgenii L Zavjalov4, Lidiya V Shestopalova2, Alexander M Shestopalov1.
Abstract
Oncolyic virotherapy is one of the modern experimental techniques to treat human cancers. Here we studied the antitumor activity of wild-type Newcastle disease virus (NDV) isolates from Russian migratory birds. We showed that NDV could selectively kill malignant cells without affecting healthy cells. We evaluated the oncolytic effect of 44 NDV isolates in 4 histogenetically different human cell lines (HCT116, HeLa, A549, MCF7). The safety of the isolates was also tested in normal peripheral blood mononuclear (PBMC) cells. The viability of tumor cell lines after incubation with NDV isolates was evaluated by MTT. All cell lines, except for normal PBMC primary cells, had different degrees of susceptibility to NDV infection. Seven NDV strains had the highest oncolytic activity, and some NDV strains demonstrated oncolytic selectivity for different cell lines. In vivo, we described the intratumoral activity of NDV/Altai/pigeon/770/2011 against subcutaneous non-small cell lung carcinoma using xenograft SCID mice model. All animals were responsive to therapy. Histology confirmed therapy-induced destructive changes and growing necrotic bulk density in tumor tissue. Our findings indicate that wild-type NDV strains selectively kill tumor cells with no effect on healthy PBMC cells, and intratumoral virotherapy with NDV suppresses the subcutaneous tumor growth in SCID mice.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29621357 PMCID: PMC5886573 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0195425
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1The viability of human peripheral blood mononuclear cells after NDV infection.
The viability of the normal human PBMC cell line after incubation with wild-type NDV strains, 4th day after viral infection. The MTT results of cells incubated with fresh medium were taken as a control (100%).
Fig 2The viability of human tumor cell lines after NDV-infection.
The viability of (a) HCT116, (b) HeLa, (c) A549 and (d) MCF7 cell lines after incubation with wild-type NDV isolates, 4th day after viral infection. The MTT results of cells incubated with fresh medium were taken as control (100%).
Fig 3The oncolytic effect of NDV isolates on human tumor cell line in vitro.
(A) Colorectal cancer HCT116 cells, (B) cervical cancer HeLa cells, (C) non-small cell lung cancer A549 cells. The MTT analysis on the 4th day after infection (2, 8 and 16 HAU per 10.000 cells).
Fig 4Wild-type NDV isolates with the most pronounced oncolytic properties against all studied human tumor cell lines in vitro.
MTT analysis, 4th day after infection (2, 8 and 16 HAU per 10.000 cells).
Fig 5The weight dynamics of SCID non-small cell lung cancer-bearing mice after infection with NDV.
Tumor-bearing mice intratumorally infected with NDV/Altai/pigeon/770/2011 (NDV) and mice intratumorally injected with phosphate- buffered saline (PBS). (+) Control is a group of animals without tumors that received subcutaneous injections of NDV/Altai/pigeon/770/2011. The zero time point indicates the initiation of therapy. Weight dynamics is graphically shown as average relative values with standard errors (mean relative value ± standard deviation, M±SE).
Fig 6Tumor growth of SCID non-small-cell lung cancer-bearing mice after infection with NDV.
Tumor-bearing mice intratumorally infected with NDV/Altai/pigeon/770/2011 (NDV) and mice intratumorally injected with phosphate- buffered saline (PBS) (four injections total). The zero time point indicates the initiation of therapy. Dynamics is graphically shown as the average relative values with standard errors (mean relative value ± standard deviation, M±SE).
Fig 7In vivo NDV therapy resulted in inhibition of subcutaneous tumor nodes of non-small-cell lung A549 carcinoma-bearing SCID mice.
(a) Mice from control group receiving PBS injections. (b) Mice intratumorally injected with four doses of NDV/Altai/pigeon/770/2011 (7 lgTCID50/100μl) during 4 days. Areas with tumor nodules are denoted by arrows. 15th day after virotherapy (38th day of tumor growth).
Fig 8NDV treatment results in tumor necrosis in non-small-cell lung carcinoma–bearing mice.
Male SCID mice bearing subcutaneous human non-small-cell lung carcinoma A549 nodules were infected with NDV/Altai/pigeon/70/2011 (7 lgTCID50/100μl) in series of intratumoral injections (one injection/day during 4 days). Mice (n = 5) were sacrificed 5, 10 and 15 days post-infection. Tumor sections were stained with hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) and microscopically analyzed for tumor necrosis. Massive sites of destructive necrosis on the 10th day after virotherapy (a) vs tumor tissue of the control group of mice, receiving PBS injections (b). Areas of necrosis are denoted by arrows. Magnification ×20.
Wild-type Newcastle disease virus isolates, gathered from migratory birds in Russia.
| № | NDV isolates | Titer HA | Viral pathotype |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | NDV/Altai/garganey/49/2008 | 32 | avirulent |
| 2 | NDV/Altai/gadwall/66/2008 | 16 | avirulent |
| 3 | NDV/Amur/grasswarbler/267/2008 | 16 | avirulent |
| 4 | NDV/Novosibirsk/mallard/718/2008 | 256 | lentogenic |
| 5 | NDV/Novosibirsk/shoveler/738/2008 | 16 | avirulent |
| 6 | NDV/Novosibirsk/garganey/753/2008 | 128 | avirulent |
| 7 | NDV/Novosibirsk/garganey/767/2008 | 16 | avirulent |
| 8 | NDV/Novosibirsk/garganey/769/2008 | 256 | avirulent |
| 9 | NDV/Adygea/duck/12/2008 | 256 | velogenic |
| 10 | NDV/Novosibirsk/shoveler/776/2008 | 256 | avirulent |
| 11 | NDV/Altai/garganey/564/2009 | 16 | avirulent |
| 12 | NDV/mallard/Amur/264/2009 | 256 | lentogenic |
| 13 | NDV/Kamchatka/gull/12/2009 | 128 | avirulent |
| 14 | NDV/Kamchatka/gull/528/2009 | 16 | avirulent |
| 15 | NDV/Novosibirsk/garganey/428/2010 | 16 | avirulent |
| 16 | NDV/Novosibirsk/shoveler/429/2010 | 64 | avirulent |
| 17 | NDV/Novosibirsk/garganey/452/2009 | 16 | avirulent |
| 18 | NDV/Novosibirsk/garganey/465/2009 | 32 | avirulent |
| 19 | NDV/Novosibirsk/goosander/529/2009 | 16 | avirulent |
| 20 | NDV/Novosibirsk/garganey/746/2009 | 32 | avirulent |
| 21 | NDV/Novosibirsk/mallard/4112/2009 | 16 | avirulent |
| 22 | NDV/Yakutiya/mallard/860/2009 | 256 | lentogenic |
| 23 | NDV/Altai/pigeon/777/2010 | 128 | mesogenic |
| 24 | NDV/Altai/mallard/784/2010 | 16 | avirulent |
| 25 | NDV/Amur/garganey/922/2010 | 64 | avirulent |
| 26 | NDV/Amur/dove/992/2010 | 16 | avirulent |
| 27 | NDV/teal/Novosibirsk region/320/2010 | 256 | lentogenic |
| 28 | NDV/Novosibirsk/garganey/321/2010 | 128 | lentogenic |
| 29 | NDV/Novosibirsk/garganey/322/2010 | 8 | avirulent |
| 30 | NDV/Novosibirsk/garganey/329/2010 | 128 | avirulent |
| 31 | NDV/Novosibirsk/garganey/339/2010 | 128 | avirulent |
| 32 | NDV/Novosibirsk/garganey/373/2010 | 32 | avirulent |
| 33 | NDV/Novosibirsk/garganey/389/2010 | 128 | avirulent |
| 34 | NDV/Novosibirsk/shoveler/396/2010 | 16 | avirulent |
| 35 | NDV/Novosibirsk/gadwall/703/2010 | 8 | avirulent |
| 36 | NDV/Novosibirsk/shoveler/945/2010 | 32 | avirulent |
| 37 | NDV/Sakhalin/pintail/47/2010 | 8 | avirulent |
| 38 | NDV/Sakhalin/widgeon/48/2010 | 32 | avirulent |
| 39 | NDV/Sakhalin/garganey/52/2010 | 32 | avirulent |
| 40 | NDV/Sakhalin/pintail/53/2010 | 256 | avirulent |
| 41 | NDV/Altai/pigeon/770/2011 | 128 | mesogenic |
| 42 | NDV/Yakutiya/mallard/852/2011 | 128 | mesogenic |
| 43 | NDV/Novosibirsk/garganey/27/2014 | 128 | lentogenic |
| 44 | NDV/Tyva/gull/14/2014 | 128 | lentogenic |
a—harvesting in ECE system, titer HA assay in HAU per 50 μl in virus contained allanoic liquid (HAU/50 μl), ECE–embryonated chicken egg.
b—based on both pathogenicity assays (MDT, ICPI) according to classification [47].