| Literature DB >> 29671772 |
Shyambabu Chaurasiya1, Nanhai G Chen2,3,4, Susanne G Warner5.
Abstract
A growing body of evidence suggests that a subset of cells within tumors are resistant to conventional treatment modalities and may be responsible for disease recurrence. These cells are called cancer stem cells (CSC), which share properties with normal stem cells including self-renewal, pluripotency, drug resistance, and the ability to maintain quiescence. While most conventional therapies can efficiently destroy rapidly dividing cancer cells comprising the bulk of a tumor, they often fail to kill the less abundant and quiescent CSCs. Furthermore, killing of only differentiated cells in the tumor may actually allow for enrichment of CSCs and thereby portend a bad prognosis. Therefore, targeting of CSCs is important to achieve long-term success in cancer therapy. Oncolytic viruses represent a completely different class of therapeutics that can kill cancer cells in a variety of ways, which differ from those of conventional therapies. Hence, CSCs that are inherently resistant to conventional therapies may be susceptible to oncolytic virus-mediated killing. Recent studies have shown that oncolytic viruses can efficiently kill CSCs in many types of cancer. Here, we discuss the mechanism through which CSCs can escape conventional therapies and how they may still be susceptible to different classes of oncolytic viruses. Furthermore, we provide a summary of recent studies that have tested oncolytic viruses on CSCs of different origins and discuss possible future directions for this fascinating subset of oncolytic virus research.Entities:
Keywords: cancer stem cells; oncolytic virus; viral therapy
Year: 2018 PMID: 29671772 PMCID: PMC5923379 DOI: 10.3390/cancers10040124
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Examples of oncolytic viruses (OVs) that are effective against CSCs of different origins.
| Cancer Type | OV | CSC Source | CSCs Susceptible to OV? | OV Replicates in CSC? | Comments | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CML | Ad | Imatinib-resistant CML patients | Yes | NA | Inhibition of colony formation in vitro and elimination of xenografts in mice | [ |
| AML | MYXV | AML patients | Yes | Yes | Prior infection of tumor cells with virus prevented engraftment in 90% of recipient mice compared to mock-infected cells | [ |
| Breast | Ad | Pleural effusion from breast cancer patients | Yes | NA | Effective killing of CSCs in vitro; prior infection of CSCs prevented formation of xenografts; anti-tumor effect against CSCs derived tumors in mice | [ |
| Breast | Ad | Pleural effusion from breast cancer patients | Yes | NA | Eradication of CSCs in vitro; anti-tumor effect against CSCs derived tumors in mice | [ |
| Breast | HSV | Mammospheres generated from breast cancer cell lines | Yes | NA | Highly toxic to CSCs in vitro and effective against CSC-derived xenografts in mice | [ |
| Breast | Reo | Human breast cancer patients | Yes | NA | Ras expression, a determinant of reovirus oncolysis, was similar in CSCs and non-CSCs; similar killing of CSC and non-CSCs both in vitro and in xenografts | [ |
| Colon | HSV | Tumorspheres generated from HCT8 cells | Yes | Yes | Highly toxic to Akt overexpressing CSCs; effective against CSC-derived xenografts in mice | [ |
| Glioblastoma | Ad | Glioblastoma patients | Yes | Yes | CSCs over-expressed Ad receptor (CAR) and were highly susceptible to the virus in vitro; significant anti-tumor effect against CSC-derived xenograft | [ |
| Glioblastoma | HSV | Glioblastoma specimen from human patients | Yes | Yes | Effective killing of CSCs in vitro and significant anti-tumor effect against xenografts in mice | [ |
| Glioblastoma | HSV | Glioblastoma specimen from human patients | Yes | NA | Effective oncolysis of CSC in vitro and anti-tumor effect against CSC-derived xenografts in mice | [ |
| Liver | Ad | Liver cancer cell lines | Yes | NA | Highly toxic to CSCs both in vitro and in xenograft models | [ |
| Liver | Measles | Surgical specimen from liver cancer patients | Yes | NA | CD133-targeted OV selectively killed CD133+ CSCs and prolonged survival of mice bearing orthotopic xenografts | [ |
| Lung | Ad | Tumorspheres generated from A549 cells | Yes | NA | TRAIL-encoding OV was toxic to CSCs in vitro and showed significant anti-tumor effect against CSCs derived xenografts in mice | [ |
| Gastric | Ad | Human castric cancer cell lines | Yes | Yes | The virus first-induced cell-cycle mobilization from G0-G1 to S/G2/M in CSCs and then killed them; OV also sensitized those cells to chemotherapies | [ |
Notes: CML, chronic myeloid leukemia; AML, acute myeloid leukemia; Ad, adenovirus; HSV, herpes simplex virus 1; MYXV, myxoma virus; CAR, NA, not assessed; coxsackivirus adenovirus receptor; TRAIL, TNF-related apoptosis-inducing ligand.
Figure 1Role of cancer stem cell (CSCs) in traditional treatment failure. While chemo- and radiation-therapy can efficiently kill differentiated cells that make the bulk of tumor, they often fail to kill CSCs. Due to their ability to undergo self-renewal and differentiation, the surviving CSCs can cause disease relapse after initial remission. Unlike the conventional therapies, OVs have the potential to kill both differentiated cells as well as CSCs and hence they may cause eradication of the disease.
Figure 2Potential mechanisms through which CSCs can resist conventional therapies, and prospects of OVs in killing such cells. CSCs have high levels of MDR expression, increased DNA repair ability and they can maintain quiescence for a long time. These features of CSCs can render chemotherapeutic drugs ineffective in killing them. However, oncolytic viruses are not affected by these features and hence they can replicate in CSCs leading the lysis of these cells. Note: OVs = Oncolytic viruses; MDR = multi-rug resistance gene; CSCs = cancer stem cells.