| Literature DB >> 32340193 |
Mitra Nair1, Maninder Khosla2, Yoshihiro Otani1, Margaret Yeh1, Flora Park1, Toshihiko Shimizu1, Jin Muk Kang1, Chelsea Bolyard3, Jun-Ge Yu2, Yeshavanth Kumar Banasavadi-Siddegowda4, Gonzalo Lopez5, Balveen Kaur1, Raphael E Pollock5, Tae Jin Lee1, Matthew Old2, Ji Young Yoo1.
Abstract
Vascularization is a common pathology for many solid tumors, and therefore anti-angiogenic strategies are being investigated as a therapeutic target for treatment. Numerous studies are also being conducted regarding the effects of oncolytic viruses, including ImlygicTM, an FDA approved oncolytic herpes simplex virus-1 (oHSV) for the treatment of highly vascularized tumors such as Kaposi sarcoma (NCT04065152), and brain tumors. To our knowledge, the effects of combining oncolytic HSV with angiogenesis inhibition on endothelial cell activation has not been previously described. Here, we tested the effects of Rapid Antiangiogenesis Mediated By Oncolytic Virus (RAMBO), an oHSV which expresses a potent anti-angiogenic gene Vasculostatin on endothelial cell activation in heavily vascularized solid tumors. oHSV treatment induces endothelial cell activation, which inhibits virus propagation and oncolysis in adjacent tumor cells in vitro. Consistently, this was also observed in intravital imaging of intracranial tumor-bearing mice in vivo where infected tumor endothelial cells could efficiently clear the virus without cell lysis. Quantitative real-time PCR (Q-PCR), leukocyte adhesion assay, and fluorescent microscopy imaging data, however, revealed that RAMBO virus significantly decreased expression of endothelial cell activation markers and leukocyte adhesion, which in turn increased virus replication and cytotoxicity in endothelial cells. In vivo RAMBO treatment of subcutaneously implanted sarcoma tumors significantly reduced tumor growth in mice bearing sarcoma compared to rHSVQ. In addition, histological analysis of RAMBO-treated tumor tissues revealed large areas of necrosis and a statistically significant reduction in microvessel density (MVD). This study provides strong preclinical evidence of the therapeutic benefit for the use of RAMBO virus as a treatment option for highly vascularized tumors.Entities:
Keywords: angiogenesis; oncolytic herpes simplex virus-1 (oHSV); rapid antiangiogenesis mediated by oncolytic virus (RAMBO); soft tissue sarcoma (STS); tumor microenvironment (TME); vasculostatin (Vstat120)
Year: 2020 PMID: 32340193 PMCID: PMC7225935 DOI: 10.3390/cancers12041040
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1Endothelial cells reduce oncolytic herpes simplex virus-1 (oHSV) replication. (A) Intravital imaging revealed oHSV infection of tumor cells away from and close to vessels (yellow arrow) one day post-infection. On day 6 post viral infection, GFP signal in cells lining the vasculature had disappeared (yellow dot arrow) but, tumors not adjacent to vasculature (white oval) had sutained GFP-positive virus presence and reduced RFP-positive tumor cells over time. (B) Maximum Intensity Projection of inset shown in panel (A). Yellow arrow indicated oHSV-infected cells along perfused blood vessels. Green: oncolytic HSV-1 (GFP), Red: GBM12-RFP, White: Alexa Fluor 647-conjugated BSA. (C) Schematic diagram of experimental design for co-culture assay with tumor and endothelial cells. Sarcoma cells that stably express mCherry were infected with oHSV (rHSVQ: GFP) for an hour before being overlaid on either endothelial cells, which were stained with Cell Tracker Blue or mCherry expressing sarcoma cells at a 1:1 ratio. (D) Images were taken 24 h after infection to compare GFP expression in sarcoma cocultured with endothelial or sarcoma cells. (E) Viral titers were measured by standard plaque forming unit assay 24 h post-infection. (F) Human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) and human dermal microvascular endothelial cells (HDMEC) were plated and treated with rHSVQ (MOI = 0.2) on 12-well plates. Quantitative real-time PCR (Q-PCR) analysis was done to examine for changes in gene expression of ICAM1 and VCAM1 between rHSVQ and Rapid Antiangiogenesis Mediated By Oncolytic Virus (RAMBO) infected endothelial cells 24 h post-infection. NT = No Treatment, * p < 0.05.
Figure 2RAMBO expresses Vasculostatin in infected sarcoma cells and reduces endothelial cell migration. (A) RAMBO virus expresses Vasculostatin. Sarcoma cell lines (ST88, A673. SK-LMS-1, MPNST-724, and A462) were plated on 6 well plates and infected with 1 MOI of rHSVQ and RAMBO virus. The cells were harvested 24 h post-infection and analyzed by western blot for expression of Vasculostatin. Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) was used as a loading control. Note the expression of Vstat120 in cells infected with RAMBO. NT = No treatment. (B) Sarcoma cell lines A673 and ST88 were treated with 1 MOI of rHSVQ and RAMBO for one hour and unbound virus was removed. CMs were collected 14 h post-infection and added to the bottom chamber of plate. Serum starved HUVEC and HDMEC cells were plated on the top chamber and were allowed to migrate for 6 h. Cells were then fixed and stained with Crystal Violet. Representative images of migrated endothelial cells (×100). (C) Migrated cell number was counted and compared between HSVQ and RAMBO infected cell conditions. Data are represented as mean ± SEM of number of cells/view field. * p < 0.05.
Figure 3RAMBO decreases endothelial cell activation. (A) RAMBO decreases endothelial cell activation. HUVEC or HDMEC cells were plated on 96-well plates and treated with conditioned media (CM) collected from mock-, rHSVQ-, or RAMBO-infected sarcoma cells. Eight hours post CM treatment, cells were treated with LeukoTrackerTM-labeled peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) and allowed to adhere to endothelial cells. After 1 h incubation, unadherent PBMCs were washed off and adherent cells were lysed and quantified as instruction. Data is represented as relative fluorescence unit (RFU). (B) RAMBO decreases ICAM1 and VCAM1 gene expression. HUVEC and HDMEC cells were plated on 12-well plates. Six hours later, sarcoma cell lines were infected with 0.2 MOI of HSVQ and RAMBO for 30 min in a suspension condition. HUVEC and HDMC cells were overlaid with infected sarcoma cells and cultured for 24 h. Q-PCR analysis was conducted to examine for changes in gene expression of ICAM1 and VCAM1 between rHSVQ- and RAMBO-infected cells cocultured with endothelial cells. Data presented are fold changes in gene expression ± SD relative to GAPDH. * p < 0.05.
Figure 4RAMBO increases virus replication in sarcoma and endothelial cell coculture condition. (A) Representative fluorescence microscopy images of GFP-positive virus-infected sarcoma cells cocultured with ECs. ECs were plates on 12 well plates. Six hours later, sarcoma cell lines A673 and ST88 were infected with 0.2 MOI oHSV (rHSVQ:GFP) and RAMBO for 30 min in a suspension condition. ECs were overlaid with infected mCherry-expressing sarcoma cells and cultured. Images were taken 24 h post-infection to compare GFP expression in RAMBO-infected cocultured cells vs HSVQ infected cells. ECs were stained with CellTracker Blue to distinguish between cell populations. (B) Quantification of virus replication. ECs were plated on 6 well plates. Six hours later, sarcoma cell lines A673 and ST88 were treated with 1 MOI of rHSVQ and RAMBO in a suspension condition. ECs were overlaid with infected sarcoma cells and cultured. Viral titers were measured by standard plaque forming unit assay 24 h post-infection and compared between rHSVQ and RAMBO infected cells. * p < 0.05. (C) Sarcoma cell lines were plated on 24 well plates and treated with rHSVQ and RAMBO virus for one hour. Unbound virus was removed and plate was imaged for 48 h using the Cytation 5 live plate reader/imager. Viral propagation was compared between rHSVQ and RAMBO infected cells via GFP expression. (D) Endothelial cells (ECs) were plates on 12-well plates. Six hours later, sarcoma cell line A673-mCherry was infected with 0.2 MOI rHSVQ and RAMBO for 30 min in a suspension condition. ECs were overlaid with infected A673-mCherry and cultured for 24 h. Cells were collected and stained with LIVE/DEAD fixable aqua cell stain. Flow cytometry was done to compare cell killing between rHSVQ- and RAMBO-infected cells and dead cell population was quantified and compared between groups. * p < 0.05.
Figure 5RAMBO virus reduces angiogenesis and enhances antitumor efficacy in sarcoma xenografts. (A) Schematic representation of animal study. All animal studies were conducted in the same way as shown in (A) except the time of tumor harvest. (B) Evaluation of antitumor and anti-angiogenic activity of RAMBO in vivo. Subcutaneous A673 sarcoma tumor-bearing mice were treated with PBS, rHSVQ or RAMBO and sacrificed three days after the virus treatment to harvest their tumor tissues for histological analysis. Hematoxylin and Eosin (H&E) staining was done on tumor tissues to compare areas of necrosis between treatment groups. Black arrows indicate endothelial cells and asterisks (*) indicate areas of necrotic tissue. (C) Representative images of tumor sections stained with CD31 antibody. Note significant reduction in CD31 positive tumor vasculature after RAMBO treatment compared to rHSVQ or PBS controls (n = 3/group). (D) Quantification of CD31 immunostained vessels per field of view in the tissue sections from treated sarcoma tumors was examined between treatment groups. Data shown are average vessel density per field of view of ×400 (FOV) ± SD (* p < 0.05). (E) Tested the antitumor efficacy of RAMBO in A673 sarcoma-bearing mice xenografts. Athymic nude mice with subcutaneous A673 sarcoma tumors were injected with rHSVQ1, RAMBO, or PBS by intratumoral injection when the A673 tumor volumes reached an average size of 150–300 mm3, and then tumor growth was measured daily. (F) Mice were sacrificed when tumor volume reached ≥1500 mm3 and mice survival was analyzed by Kaplan–Meier survival curve. (G) A673 tumors treated with HSVQ or RAMBO were harvested 3 days post virus treatment and dissociated and processed for titration. Viral titers were measured by standard plaque forming unit assay on Vero cells and compared between HSVQ and RAMBO infected tumors. N.D., not determined; * p < 0.05.