| Literature DB >> 33167582 |
Laura Menotti1, Elisa Avitabile1.
Abstract
Oncolytic viruses are smart therapeutics against cancer due to their potential to replicate and produce the needed therapeutic dose in the tumor, and to their ability to self-exhaust upon tumor clearance. Oncolytic virotherapy strategies based on the herpes simplex virus are reaching their thirties, and a wide variety of approaches has been envisioned and tested in many different models, and on a range of tumor targets. This huge effort has culminated in the primacy of an oncolytic HSV (oHSV) being the first oncolytic virus to be approved by the FDA and EMA for clinical use, for the treatment of advanced melanoma. The path has just been opened; many more cancer types with poor prognosis await effective and innovative therapies, and oHSVs could provide a promising solution, especially as combination therapies and immunovirotherapies. In this review, we analyze the most recent advances in this field, and try to envision the future ahead of oHSVs.Entities:
Keywords: combination therapy; genetic engineering; herpes simplex virus; immune checkpoint inhibitors; oncolytic immunoviroterapy; oncolytic virus; tropism retargeting; virotherapy; virus arming
Year: 2020 PMID: 33167582 PMCID: PMC7664223 DOI: 10.3390/ijms21218310
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Conditionally replicating and transcriptionally targeted oHSVs.
| oHSV Name (Alternative Name) | Genetic Modification | Diagram | Clinical Trial Identifier | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| deletion of UL23 (encodes TK) | a | – | [ | |
| inactivation of UL39 (encodes ICP6, large subunit of RR) by | b | – | [ | |
| NV1020 | deletion of one copy of γ134.5 (encodes ICP34.5 neurovirulence factor, anti-PKR) | c | NCT00149396 (C) | [ |
| HF10 | duplications of UL53, UL54, UL55; deletion of UL56 | d | NCT02428036 (C) | [ |
| R3616 | deletion of two copies of γ134.5 (encodes ICP34.5 neurovirulence factor, anti-PKR) | e | – | [ |
| 1716 | deletion of two copies of γ134.5 (encodes ICP34.5 neurovirulence factor, anti-PKR) | f | NCT00931931 (C) | [ |
| G207 | deletion of two copies of γ134.5 (encodes ICP34.5 neurovirulence factor, anti-PKR); | g | NCT00028158 (C) | [ |
| G47Δ | deletion of two copies of γ134.5 (encodes ICP34.5 neurovirulence factor, anti-PKR); | h | UMIN000015995 (C) | [ |
| C134 | deletion of two copies of γ134.5 (encodes ICP34.5 neurovirulence factor, anti-PKR); | i | NCT03657576 (A) | [ |
|
| ||||
| rQNestin | γ134.5 (encodes ICP34.5 neurovirulence factor, anti-PKR) under control of nestin promoter | j | NCT03152318 (R) | [ |
| NG34 | GADD34 (human counterpart of γ134.5) under control of nestin promoter | k | – | [ |
TK: thymidine kinase; PKR: protein kinase R; RR: ribonucleotide reductase; NCT: trials registered at ClinicalTrials.gov; UMIN: trials registered in University hospital Medical Information Network (Japan). (A): active, not recruiting; (C): completed; (R): recruiting.
Figure 1Schematic diagram of wt and recombinant HSV genomes. Genes relevant for tumor-specificity are shown as colored boxes and their names are indicated above the genome line; the gene product names are indicated below the genome line. (A) wt HSV: IR, inverted repeats (grey boxes); UL: unique long; US: unique short. (B,C) Diagrams of the oHSVs described in Table 1: (B) oHSVs with single and multiple mutations, (C) transcriptionally targeted oHSVs. β-gal: β-galactosidase; TK: thymidine kinase. Red crosses indicate the inactivation of a gene, either by deletion (Δ) or by insertion.
Characteristics of example armed oHSVs.
| oHSV Name | Expressed Transgene @ Viral Locus | Parental Virus | Diagram | Clinical Trial Identifier | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| R8306 | murine IL-4 @ γ134.5 loci | HSV-1(F), Δ 2 copies of γ134.5 | a | – | [ |
| M002 | murine IL-12 @ γ134.5 loci | HSV-1(F), Δ 2 copies of γ134.5 | b | – | [ |
| M032 | human IL-12 @ γ134.5 loci | HSV-1(F), Δ 2 copies of γ134.5 | c | NCT02062827 (R) | [ |
| NV1042 | murine IL-12 @ γ134.5 locus | NV1020 (Δ 1 copy of γ134.5) | d | – | [ |
| NV1034 | murine GM-CSF @ γ134.5 locus | NV1020 (Δ 1 copy of γ134.5) | e | – | [ |
| JS1/ICP34.5-/ICP47-/GM-CSF | murine GM-CSF @ γ134.5 loci | JS-1 1, Δ 2 copies of γ134.5, ΔUS12 | f | – | [ |
| OncoVEXGM-CSF, T-VEC, talimogene laherparepvec | human GM-CSF @ γ134.5 loci | JS-1 1, Δ 2 copies of γ134.5, ΔUS12 | g | NCT00769704 (C) | [ |
| Synco-1 | GALV fusogenic protein @ | HSV-1, Δ 2 copies of γ134.5 | h | – | [ |
| rRp450 | rat CYP2B1 @ UL39 | HSV-1 (KOS) + inactivated UL39 | i | NCT01071941 (R) | [ |
| HSVyCD | yCD @ UL39 | HSV-1 (KOS) + inactivated UL39 | j | – | [ |
| OncoVEXCD | Fcy::Fur fusion @ γ134.5 locus | JS-1 1, Δ 2 copies of γ134.5, ΔUS12 | k | – | [ |
1 HSV clinical isolate. Δ: deletion. NCT: trials registered at ClinicalTrials.gov. (C): completed; (R): recruiting.
Figure 2Schematic diagram of example armed oHSVs genomes described in Table 2. Murine cytokines are in green font, human cytokines in blue, heterologous fusogenic proteins are in pink, prodrug converting enzymes in purple. Red crosses indicate the inactivation of a gene, either by deletion (Δ) or by insertion of the heterologous arming gene.
Characteristics of example tropism retargeted oHSVs sorted by engineered viral glycoprotein.
| Retargeting Ligand(s) @ Viral Glycoprotein | Target Heterologous Receptor | oHSV Name | Parental Strain | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| IL-13 @ gD aa 24 | IL-13Rα2 | R5111 | HSV-1(F) | [ |
| uPA @gD aa 24 | uPAR | R5181 | HSV-1(F) | [ |
| IL-13 @ gD Δ1-32 | IL-13Rα2 | R5141 | HSV-1(F)+gDV34S | [ |
| scFv to HER2 @ gD aa24 | HER2 | R-LM11 | HSV-1(F)BAC+ | [ |
| scFv to HER2 @ gDΔ6-38 | HER2 | R-LM113 1 | HSV-1(F)BAC+EGFP | [ |
| scFv to HER2 @ gDΔ61-218 | HER2 | R-LM249 1 | HSV-1(F)BAC+EGFP | [ |
| scFv to CEA @ gDΔ2-24 | CEA | KNC 1 | HSV-1(KOS)+gDY38C+gB:NT allele | [ |
| scFv to EGFR @ gDΔ2-24 | EGFR, EGFRvIII | KNE 1 | HSV-1(KOS)+gDY38C+gB:NT allele | [ |
| scFv to EGFR @ gDΔ6-38 | EGFR | R-611 1 | HSV-1(F)BAC+EGFP | [ |
| scFv to PSMA @gDΔ6-38 | PSMA | R-593 1 | HSV-1(F)BAC+EGFP | [ |
| scFv to EGFRvIII @ gDΔ6-38 | EGFRvIII | R-613 1 | HSV-1(F)BAC+EGFP | [ |
|
| ||||
| scFv to HER2 and GCN4 peptide | HER2 and GCN4R | R-87 1, R-89 1, R-97 1, R-99 1 | HSV-1(F)BAC+EGFP | [ |
|
| ||||
| scFv to HER2 @ gH aa 23 | HER2 | R-VG809 2 | HSV-1(F)BAC+mCherry+gDΔ6-38 | [ |
| GCN4 peptide @ gH aa 23 | HER2 and GCN4R | R-213 2 | R-LM113 | [ |
|
| ||||
| scFv to HER2 @ gB aa 43 | HER2 | R-909 2 | HSV-1(F)BAC+EGFP+gDΔ6-38 | [ |
1 fully retargeted (retargeted to heterologous receptors, and detargeted from HSV natural receptors). 2 contains companion deletions in gD to achieve detargeting from HSV natural receptors. aa: amino acid residue. BAC: bacterial artificial chromosome. Δ: deletion.
Figure 3Schematic diagram of the ectodomain of HSV gD engineered for tropism retargeting, described in Table 3. (A) gD with single insertions, (B) gD with double insertions. The names of the oHSV recombinants are in red. Numbers indicate amino acid (aa) residues. The boxes depicting gD or insert lengths are drawn to scale. The blue oval indicates a mutated residue. Scale bar: 100 aa. Δ: deletion.
Figure 4Schematic diagram of the ectodomain of the HSV glycoproteins gH (A) and gB (B) engineered for tropism retargeting, as described in Table 3. Both gH and gB carry single insertions. The names of the oHSV recombinants are in ochre yellow for gH engineering and blue for gB engineering. Numbers indicate amino acid (aa) residues. The boxes depicting glycoproteins or insert lengths are drawn to scale. Scale bar: 100 aa.