| Literature DB >> 30626434 |
Zong Sheng Guo1,2, Binfeng Lu3,4, Zongbi Guo5, Esther Giehl3,6, Mathilde Feist3,6, Enyong Dai3,6, Weilin Liu3,6, Walter J Storkus3,4,7, Yukai He8, Zuqiang Liu3,6, David L Bartlett3,6.
Abstract
Cancer vaccines and oncolytic immunotherapy are promising treatment strategies with potential to provide greater clinical benefit to patients with advanced-stage cancer. In particular, recombinant vaccinia viruses (VV) hold great promise as interventional agents. In this article, we first summarize the current understanding of virus biology and viral genes involved in host-virus interactions to further improve the utility of these agents in therapeutic applications. We then discuss recent findings from basic and clinical studies using VV as cancer vaccines and oncolytic immunotherapies. Despite encouraging results gleaned from translational studies in animal models, clinical trials implementing VV vectors alone as cancer vaccines have yielded largely disappointing results. However, the combination of VV vaccines with alternate forms of standard therapies has resulted in superior clinical efficacy. For instance, combination regimens using TG4010 (MVA-MUC1-IL2) with first-line chemotherapy in advanced-stage non-small cell lung cancer or combining PANVAC with docetaxel in the setting of metastatic breast cancer have clearly provided enhanced clinical benefits to patients. Another novel cancer vaccine approach is to stimulate anti-tumor immunity via STING activation in Batf3-dependent dendritic cells (DC) through the use of replication-attenuated VV vectors. Oncolytic VVs have now been engineered for improved safety and superior therapeutic efficacy by arming them with immune-stimulatory genes or pro-apoptotic molecules to facilitate tumor immunogenic cell death, leading to enhanced DC-mediated cross-priming of T cells recognizing tumor antigens, including neoantigens. Encouraging translational and early phase clinical results with Pexa-Vec have matured into an ongoing global phase III trial for patients with hepatocellular carcinoma. Combinatorial approaches, most notably those using immune checkpoint blockade, have produced exciting pre-clinical results and warrant the development of innovative clinical studies. Finally, we discuss major hurdles that remain in the field and offer some perspectives regarding the development of next generation VV vectors for use as cancer therapeutics.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30626434 PMCID: PMC6325819 DOI: 10.1186/s40425-018-0495-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunother Cancer ISSN: 2051-1426 Impact factor: 13.751
Fig. 1Vaccinia virus life cycle. A diagram of the infected cell with an exaggerated view of the cellular compartments, including the ER (endoplasmic reticulum), CGN (cis-Golgi network), C (cis-Golgi), M (medial-Golgi), T (trans-Golgi) and TGN (trans-Golgi network), is shown. Also shown are the major stages of the viral life cycle. Following late gene expression, pro-virion forms assemble to form the IMV. The IMV targets the TGN and, following envelopment, the IEV is formed. IEVs are propelled to the cell surface by polymerization of actin filaments. Once released, the virus may remain attached to the membrane as a CEV or be released into the medium as an EEV. CEV: cell-associated enveloped virus; EEV: extracellular enveloped virus; IEV: intracellular enveloped virus; IMV: intracellular mature virus. This figure was adapted from Grosenbach DW, Hruby DE. Front. Biosci. (1998) 3:d354–364 [174] with permission
A comparison of three oncolytic viruses: strength and pitfalls
| Virus | VV | Herpes simplex virus (HSV) | Coxsackievirus A21, B3 (CVA21 and CVB3) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Genome | dsDNA (~ 180-Kb, 200 genes) | dsDNA (~ 152-kb, 80 genes) | (+) ssRNA (~ 7.4-Kb, one polyprotein) |
| Capacity of inserted DNA | 25–40 Kb | 30–40 Kb | 300 bases for stable recombinant |
| Tumor selectivity (once inside the cells) | Pexa-Vec: selectively replicates in and destroys cancer cells driven by genetic pathways commonly activated in cancers. | T-VEC: two mutations make up cancer selectivity with activated Ras and high endogenous ribonucleotide reductase | Aberrant signaling pathways within tumor cells |
| Life cycle | Cytoplasm (no risk of integration) | Nucleus (more risk of integration) | Cytoplasm |
| Mechanisms of cell death | Apoptosis and necroptosis (ICD)a | Apoptosis, necrosis, and pyroptosis (ICD) | Immunogenic apoptosis, autophagy (ICD) |
| Immunogenicity | High | High | High |
| Transgene expression | High | High | High |
| Clinical trial stage | Phase III for liver cancer | T-VEC approved for melanoma | Phase II study in advanced melanoma (CVA21) |
aICD immunogenic cell death
Vaccinia virus (VV) encodes multiple genes whose products modulate immune responses
| Viral genes | Key function | Relevant findings | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| A41L | chemokine binding protein | Deletion of A41L enhances VV immunogenicity and vaccine efficacy | [ |
| A44L | 3beta-HSD enzyme (v3beta-HSD) | A44L promotes steroid synthesis | [ |
| A46R | TLR inhibitor and putative IL-1 antagonist | A46R is an inhibitor of the TLR4 signaling pathway | [ |
| A49 | Triggers Wnt signaling | A49 targets β-TrCP and thus affects multiple cellular pathways, including the NF-κB and Wnt signaling cascades | [ |
| A52R | Putative inhibitor of TLR signaling | A52R targets Toll-like receptor signaling complexes to suppress host defense | [ |
| A53R | Soluble TNF receptor | The gene deleted virus retains high immunogenicity but replication is attenuated | [ |
| B5R | Inhibits complement | Anti-B5 (EV protein) antibody-directed cell lysis via complement is a powerful mechanism for clearance of infected cells | [ |
| B8R | IFN-γ soluble receptor | B8R is a type II IFN binding protein | [ |
| B13R (SPI-2) | Inhibits IL-1β converting enzyme | B13R is a nonessential immune-modulating gene that has antiapoptotic and anti-inflammatory properties with sequence homology to serine protease inhibitors (serpins) | [ |
| B15R | IL-1β soluble receptor | Deletion led to increased dendritic cell, natural killer cell, and neutrophil migration, as well as chemokine/cytokine expression | [ |
| B18R | IFN-α/β soluble receptor | B18R encodes a secreted decoy receptor with a broad antagonizing effect against type I IFNs. It is good for viral replication | [ |
| C3L (VCP) | Complement control protein (VCP) | VCP modulates adaptive immune responses during infection | [ |
| C6 | Binds to STA2 and inhibits type I IFN signaling | C6 is a dual function protein that inhibits the cellular responses to type I IFNs and as an inhibitor of IRF-3 activation | [ |
| C7L | Antagonizes IRF1-induced antiviral activities | C7L inhibits antiviral activities induced by Type I interferons | [ |
| C12L | Binds and inhibits IL-18 | C12L promotes virulence by reducing gamma interferon production and natural killer and T-cell activity | [ |
| E3L | Binds dsRNA to block PKR activation | E3 protein prevents the antiviral action of ISG15 | [ |
| F1L | Inhibits cytochrome C | F1L promotes virulence by inhibiting inflammasome activation | [ |
| K1L | Inhibits NF-κB activation | K1L supports viral replication in human cells. Deletion of the gene led to a virus that is less pathogenic due to muted innate immune responses, yet still elicits protective immunity | [ |
| K3L | The dsRNA-activated protein kinase (PKR) is inhibited by this pseudosubstrate inhibitor | K3L prevents phosphorylation of e1F2α | [ |
| K7R | Promotes histone methylation associated with heterochromatin association | K7R is a virulence gene; it inhibits the NF-κB pathway and thus the migration of neutrophil cells. It affects the acute immune response | [ |
| M1L | Associates with apoptosome | The current model is that M1L associates with and allows the formation of the apoptosome, but prevents apoptotic functions of the apoptosome | [ |
| N1L | Inhibits NF-κB | N1L is a Bcl-2-like anti-apoptotic protein. It inhibits the NK cell response | [ |
Due to the limitation of the number of references that can be cited for this journal, not all relevant papers can be listed
Recombinant vaccinia virus (VV) vectors as cancer vaccines: representative clinical studies
| Name | VV strains or other poxvirus | TAA | Immunostimulatory gene or agents | Clinical trial stage and type of cancer | Immunological responses and clinical outcomes | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TroVax | MVA | 5 T4 | A variety of agents (such as IL-2, IFN-α, sunitinib) | Phases II and III ( | (1). Patients with good prognosis receiving vaccine + IL-2 had improved overall survival when compared to IL-2 alone. (2). Association between 5 T4-specific (but not MVA) antibody responses and enhanced survival. | [ |
| VV with A0201- restricted epitopes | MVA | Epitopes from gp100, MART-2 & tyrosinase | B7.1 and B7.2 | Phase I, II | Direct injection into lymph node, or given as a prime followed by peptide boosting; both gave antigen-specific CD8+ T cell responses. No overall survival benefit. | [ |
| TG4010 | MVA | MUC1 | IL-2 | Phase 2b | TG4010 plus chemotherapy seems to improve progression-free survival relative to placebo plus chemotherapy. Because the primary endpoint was met, the trial will continue into phase III. | [ |
| MVA-brachyury-TRICOM | MVA | Brachyury | TRICOM [B7.1, ICAM-1, LFA3] | Phase I ( | Brachyury-specific T-cell responses were observed at all dose levels and in most patients. | [ |
| PROSTVAC | VV prime and fowlpox boost | PSA | TRICOM [B7.1, ICAM-1, LFA3] | Phase II | Increased PSA-specific CTL responses, particularly with GM-CSF or IL-2. In prostate cancer, an increase in progression-free survival was observed. | [ |
| PANVAC | PANVAC (VV and fowlpox) | CEA and MUC1 | Just PANVAC or none (chemo alone) | Phase II ( | Combination of PANVAC with docetaxel provides a clinical benefit. The median progression-free survival was 7.9 months in the combination group vs. 3.9 months in the chemo group. | [ |
Selective examples of oncolytic vaccinia virus (VV) used in preclinical studies
| Virus name | Strain | Transgene | Mode of cell death | Antitumor activities, especially immunity | Tumor models | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pexa-Vec | Wyeth | GM-CSF | Apoptosis and necrosis | Tumor cell infection and lysis; antitumor immune response; tumor vascular disruption | hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and other cancers | [ |
| vvDD-GFP | WR | EGFP; | Necrosis and apoptosis; | CD11b + cells and CD11b + Ly6G+ cells (dendritic cells and neutrophils) | Breast, colon, and ovarian cancer models | [ |
| GLV-1 h68 | Lister | Renilla luciferase-GFP fusion protein, β-galactosidase, β-glucuronidase | Apoptosis and others | Immune defense activation via IFN-stimulated genes (STAT-1 and IRF-7), cytokines, chemokines, and innate immune effector function | Breast cancer and other cancer types | [ |
| VG9-GMCSF | Tiantan Guang9 strain ( | GM-CSF | Unknown | Antitumor activity and induced tumor-specific immune response | Melanoma | [ |
| ∆ | WR | Luciferase | Unknown | Durable tumor-antigen specific cytotoxic T-cell response | Bladder cancer | [ |
| CVV | Wyeth strain | GFP | Unknown | Complete regression of liver tumorigenicity and metastasis to the colon. | HCC | [ |
| deVV5 | Chimeric VV from WY, MVA, WR, and COP | Unknown | Higher tumor selectivity and more viral replication in cancer cells | Not tested yet | [ | |
| CF33 and CF189 | Chimeric parapoxvirus | Unknown | Effective at low viral dose; abscopal antitumor effect | Triple negative breast cancer and colorectal cancer | [ |
Fig. 2A model of how immunogenic cell death (ICD) and expression of proinflammatory Th1 cytokines from an oncolytic virus (OV) lead to potent antitumor immunity. An OV selectively replicates in tumor or/and stromal cells. This leads to induction of ICD, presenting both “find me” (extracellular HMGB1 and ATP) and “eat me” signals on the cell surface (such as ecto-CRT) to phagocytes. The presented/released danger signals (DAMPs and PAMPs) activate immature DC (iDC) to become mature DC (mDC). Apoptotic bodies and cellular fragments released via ICD are engulfed by APCs, and TAAs are processed into peptides that are presented in MHC class I/II complexes in concert with costimulatory molecules to naive CD8+ and CD4+ T cells, respectively. Such activated T cells may then expand and undergo polarized differentiation predictable on additional immune-stimulatory molecules expressed by recombinant OV. This figure has been modified from our previous model [6]. HMGB1: high mobility group box 1; DAMP: damage-associated molecular pattern; PAMP: pathogen-associated molecular pattern; APC: antigen-presenting cell; TAA: tumor-associated antigen