| Literature DB >> 33167307 |
Anne Everts1, Melissa Bergeman2, Grant McFadden2, Vera Kemp3.
Abstract
Current cancer therapeutics often insufficiently eradicate malignant cells due to the surrounding dense tumor stroma. This multi-componential tissue consists of mainly cancer-associated fibroblasts, the (compact) extracellular matrix, tumor vasculature, and tumor-associated macrophages, which all exert crucial roles in maintaining a pro-tumoral niche. Their continuous complex interactions with tumor cells promote tumor progression and metastasis, emphasizing the challenges in tumor therapy development. Over the last decade, advances in oncolytic virotherapy have shown that oncolytic viruses (OVs) are a promising multi-faceted therapeutic platform for simultaneous tumor and stroma targeting. In addition to promoting tumor cell oncolysis and systemic anti-tumor immunity, accumulating data suggest that OVs can also directly target stromal components, facilitating OV replication and spread, as well as promoting anti-tumor activity. This review provides a comprehensive overview of the interactions between native and genetically modified OVs and the different targetable tumor stromal components, and outlines strategies to improve stroma targeting by OVs.Entities:
Keywords: oncolytic viruses; tumor microenvironment; tumor stroma; virotherapy
Year: 2020 PMID: 33167307 PMCID: PMC7694393 DOI: 10.3390/biomedicines8110474
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomedicines ISSN: 2227-9059
Figure 1Simultaneous tumor and stroma targeting upon in situ oncolytic virus administration. In situ administration of natural, bioselected, or genetically engineered oncolytic viruses (OVs) results in targeting of tumor cells as well as stroma components, including heterogeneous cancer-associated fibroblasts, extracellular matrix, tumor vasculature, and tumor-associated macrophages. As a result, OV penetration and replication are increased, leading to enhanced tumor killing and anti-tumoral immune activity.
Characteristics and functions of five distinctive CAF subsets.
| CAF Subset | Effect on Tumor | Characteristics | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| myCAFs | Anti-tumoral | Expression of COL1A1, FAP, VIM | ↓ Expression of co-stimulatory molecules CD80, CD86, CD40 | Expression of PDPN, DCN | ↑ Expression of αSMA, TAGLN, MYL9, TPM1/2, MMP11, POSTN, and HOPX |
| ↑ Collagen production | |||||
| Restrains tumor upon Hedgehog activation | |||||
| Formation upon TGFβ-SMAD2/3 signaling | |||||
| iCAFs | Pro-tumoral | ↑ Expression of AGTR1, PDGFRA, CFD, LMNA, and DPT | |||
| Secretion of inflammatory mediators, e.g., IL-6, G-CSF, LIF, CXCL1 | |||||
| Hyaluronan synthesis→ ↑ migration/invasion tumor cells→ impaired vasculature → therapeutic resistance | |||||
| Formation upon IL-1α induced NF-κB and LIF/JAK-STAT3 signaling | |||||
| apCAFs | Pro-tumoral | Expression of MHC-II and H2-Ab1 | |||
| Present antigens to CD4+ T cells, lack co-stimulatory molecules → hypothetically deactivation by inducing anergy or differentiation into Tregs | |||||
| cCAFs | Pro-tumoral | Circulate individually or clustered with tumor cells | |||
| Metastasis and tumor cell colonization | |||||
| CD10+GPR77+ CAFs | Pro-tumoral | CD10 and GPR77 | |||
| ↑ NF-kB activation → IL-6, IL-8 secretion → cancer stemness and persistence | |||||
↑, upregulation; ↓, downregulation; →, leading to; CAF, cancer-associated fibroblasts; myCAFs, myofibroblastic CAFs; iCAFs, inflammatory CAFs; apCAFs, antigen-presenting CAFs; cCAFs, circulating CAFs; GPR77, G-protein-coupled receptor 77; COL1A1, collagen type I alpha I chain; FAP, fibroblast-associated protein; VIM, vimentin; PDPN, podoplanin; DCN, decorin; αSMA, α-smooth muscle actin; TAGLN, transgelin; MYL9, myosin light chain 9; TPM1/2, tropomyosins 1 and 2; MMP11, matrix metallopeptidase 11; POSTN, periostin; HOPX, homeobox transcription factor; TGFβ, transforming growth factor beta; AGTR1, angiotensin II receptor type 1; PDGFRA, platelet-derived growth factor receptor alpha; CFD, complement factor D; LMNA, laminin A/C; DPT, dermatopontin; IL-6, interleukin-6; G-CSF; granulocyte-colony stimulating factor; CXCL1, chemokine C-X-C motif ligand 1; IL-1α, interleukin-1 alpha; LIF, leukemia inhibitory factor; JAK/STAT3, janus kinase/signal transducer and activator of transcription-3; MHC-II, major histocompatibility complex class II; H2Aa/b1, histocompatibility 2 class II antigen A alpha and beta1; NF-kB, nuclear factor kappa-light-chain-enhancer of activated B cells; IL-8, interleukin-8.
Overview of inherent, bioselected and genetically engineered OVs targeting tumor stroma components.
| Virus/Vector | Modification/Transgene | Stroma Target | Observations |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| VSV | CAFs, vasculature [ | CAF and VEC infection | |
| Reovirus | Vasculature [ | Viral replication in VECs | |
| VV | Vasculature [ | ↓ Anti-viral response VECs; ↓ (Re)vascularization | |
| HSV-1 | Vasculature [ | Anti-/pro-angiogenic effects | |
| HHV-6 | Vasculature [ | ↓ Angiogenesis | |
|
| |||
| AdiLG397T-RGD | iLG39T mutation | CAFs [ | CAF infection and killing |
|
| |||
| Ad-F512, -TK/GCV | SPARC promoter | CAFs, vasculature [ | CAF and VEC killing |
| Ad-(5/3)-kBF512HRE | Triple chimeric promoter | CAFs [ | CAF killing |
| AdTATMMP | MMP-cleavable linker | CAFs [ | ↑ CAF infection, ↑ killing |
| EnAd-CMV-FAP-BiTE | FAP-targeted BiTE | CAFs [ | T cell-mediated CAF killing |
| ICO15k-FBiTE | FAP-targeted BiTE | CAFs [ | T cell-mediated CAF killing |
| MV-m/h-uPA | uPA | CAFs; vasculature [ | Target uPAR+ CAFs and VECs |
| GLV-1h282 | Anti-FAP | CAFs [ | CAF killing |
| KMMP9 | EGFR, MMP9 | ECM [ | ↓ ECM → ↑ HSV penetration |
| GLV-1h255 | MMP9 | ECM [ | ↓ ECM → ↑ replication |
| rQT3 | TIMP-3 | ECM [ | ↓ Tumor (several hypotheses) |
| bG47Delta-dnFGFR | FGFR | Vasculature [ | ↑ VEC killing |
| FGF2-TK | FGF2-Fab | Vasculature [ | Targets FGF2+ VECs |
| JX-594 | TK disrupted | Vasculature [ | Targets TK+ VECs |
| CRAd-S-5/3shMMP14 | MMP14 shRNA | ECM [ | ↓ Angiogenesis |
| Ad-uPAR-MMP9 | Anti-sense uPAR and MMP9 | ECM [ | ↓ Angiogenesis |
| vvdd-VEGFR-1-Ig | VEGFR-1 | Vasculature [ | ↓ Angiogenesis |
| GLV-1h444 | Anti-VEGF/-EGFR | Vasculature [ | ↓ Blood vessel density |
| GLV-1h446 | Anti-EGFR/-FAP | Vasculature, CAFs [ | ↓ Blood vessel density, likely CAF targeting |
| NV1042 | IL-12 | Vasculature [ | ↓ Neovascularization |
| OVV-CXCR4-A-mFc | CXCR4 antagonist | Vasculature [ | ↓ Angiogenesis |
↑, upregulation; ↓, downregulation; →, leading to; VSV, vesicular stomatitis virus; VV, vaccinia virus; HSV, herpes simplex virus; HHV, human herpesvirus; Ad, adenovirus; MV, measles virus. TK, thymidine kinase; GCV, ganciclovir; MMP, matrix metalloprotease; FAP, fibroblast activation protein; BiTE, bispecific T cell engager; uPA(R), urokinase-type plasminogen activator (receptor); FAP, fibroblast activation protein; EGFR, epidermal growth factor receptor; TIMP, tissue inhibitor metalloproteinase; FGF(R), fibroblast growth factor (receptor); shRNA, short hairpin RNA; VEGFR, vascular-endothelial growth factor receptor; IL, interleukin; CXCR4, chemokine C-X-C motif receptor 4; CAF, cancer-associated fibroblasts; VECs, vascular endothelial cells; ECM, extracellular matrix.