| Literature DB >> 34901031 |
Ludi Yang1,2, Xiang Gu1,2, Jie Yu1,2, Shengfang Ge1,2, Xianqun Fan1,2.
Abstract
Oncolytic viruses are naturally occurring or genetically engineered viruses that can replicate preferentially in tumor cells and inhibit tumor growth. These viruses have been considered an effective anticancer strategy in recent years. They mainly function by direct oncolysis, inducing an anticancer immune response and expressing exogenous effector genes. Their multifunctional characteristics indicate good application prospects as cancer therapeutics, especially in combination with other therapies, such as radiotherapy, chemotherapy and immunotherapy. Therefore, it is necessary to comprehensively understand the utility of oncolytic viruses in cancer therapeutics. Here, we review the characteristics, antitumor mechanisms, clinical applications, deficiencies and associated solutions, and future prospects of oncolytic viruses.Entities:
Keywords: clinical applications; immunity; mechanisms; oncolytic virus; tumor
Year: 2021 PMID: 34901031 PMCID: PMC8662562 DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2021.790150
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Dev Biol ISSN: 2296-634X
The unique characteristics of oncolytic virus.
| DNA | RNA | Rhabdovirus | Picornavirus | Togavirus | Reovirus | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Parvovirus | Adenovirus | Herpesvirus | Poxvirus | Paramyxovirus | |||||
| ssDNA | dsDNA | dsDNA | dsDNA | ss (−)RNA | ss (−)RNA | ss (+)RNA | ss (+)RNA | dsRNA | |
| Genome size | 5–6 kb | 26–45 kb | 120–240 kb | 130–280 kb | 15.2–15.9 kb | 11–15 kb | 7–8 kb | 9.7–11.8 kb | 10 segments of double-stranded (ds) RNA |
| Virion | Naked | Naked | Enveloped | Enveloped | Enveloped | Enveloped | Naked | Enveloped | Naked |
| Capsid symmetry | Icosahedral | Icosahedral | Icosahedral | Complex | Helical | Helical | Icosahedral | Icosahedral | Icosahedral |
| VAP | NA | spike or fiber associated with each penton base of the capsid | gp350/gp220 | A27L, M115L, A26 | HA | gpG | VP1-VP3 | E1, E2 | σ1s |
| Cell receptor | Sialic acid residues | CAR, CD46, VCAM1 | HVEM, nectin 1, nectin 2 | GAGs, EFC | SLAM, CD46, Neuraminidase | LDLR | CD155, CAR, ICAM-1, DAF | phospholipid receptors | JAM-A |
| Receptor, sialoglycoconjugates | |||||||||
| type of penetration | Viropexis | Viropexis | Viropexis | Fusion | Fusion | Viropexis | Viropexis | Viropexis | NA |
| Ability to penetrate BBB | + | − | − | − | −/+ | − | −/+ | + | + |
| transgene capacity | + | ++ | +++ | +++ | + | + | + | NA | +++ |
| Immunogenicity | + | − | − | − | − | − | +/− | + | − |
| Antivirals | − | + | + | + | − | − | − | NA | − |
NA, not applicable.
FIGURE 1The effects of tumor lysis of oncolytic virus. (A) Oncolytic viruses are able to kill tumor cells directly. (B) After infecting the endothelium of the tumor vasculature, oncolytic viruses are able to recruit neutrophil cells and mediate the formation of clots and vascular collapse, which induce the ischemic death of tumor cells. (C) VEGF plays an important role in the regulation of angiogenesis and tumor growth. Some specific oncolytic viruses, such as adenovirus, can express the E1A protein, which can downregulate VEGF by interacting with angiogenic proteins, thereby affecting new blood vessels in the tumor microenvironment and ultimately achieving oncolytic effects.
FIGURE 2Oncolytic viruses can induce host systemic anti-tumor immunity to kill tumor cells. Following viral infection, viral replication leads to ER stress and genotoxic stress in tumor cells, which results in the release of the viral elements TAAs, PAMPs, and DAMPs. Sensing elements, such as PRRs, can recognize these molecules, which leads to immune cell activation and inflammatory signal transduction. With virus replication, antiviral pathways can be activated. This activation induces the production of cytokines and type I IFNs, which mediate the activation and maturation of immune cells, such as DCs and NK cells. NK cells migrate to the tumor area under the action of chemokines, such as IL-12, IL-2, and IFN-α/β, and exert antitumoral properties by releasing IFN-γ, TNF-α and CD107. Mature DCs can present antigenic peptides within the context of MHC I molecules to CD4+ T cells and within the context of MHC II molecules to CD8+ T cells. CD8+ T cells are also activated through the stimulation of CD4+ T cells. The activation of CD4+ T cells by DCs helps to activate CD8+ T cells by inducing the production of cytokines such as IL‐2. The recognition of tumor surface antigens by antibodies can trigger CTL killing of tumor cells through Fas-FasL interactions, TNF‐TNFR signaling, and the perforin/granzyme pathway.
Oncolytic virus anti-tumor clinical trials.
| Virus | Modification | Virus administration | Status | Indication | Therapeutic Approach | Clinical trials | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||||
| DNX-2401 | Δ24-RGD insertion | Intratumoural | I | Glioblastoma, ovarian cancer | Combination or OV only | NCT03178032 NCT01956734 | Active |
| Completed | |||||||
| VCN-01 | PH20 hyaluronidase | Intratumoural | I | Pancreatic cancer, Retinoblastoma, Head and Neck Neoplasms | Combination or OV only | NCT03799744 NCT03284268 | Recruiting |
| Osteosarcoma | Recruiting | ||||||
| CG0070 | GM-CSF and E3 deletion | Intratumoural | I-III | Bladder Cancer | Combination or OV only | NCT04610671 NCT02365818 | Recruiting |
| Completed | |||||||
| Colo-Ad1 | Chimeric Ad11/3 group B | Intratumoural | I | Colon cancer, NSCLC, Renal cell carcinoma, Bladder cancer | OV only | NCT02053220 | Completed |
| ICOVIR5 | Modified DNX-2401-E2F promoter opimitized | Intravenous | I-II | Melanoma, Solid Tumors | OV only | NCT01864759 | Completed |
| NCT01844661 | Completed | ||||||
| Ad5-yCD/mutTKSR39rephIL12 | Ad serotype 5; insertion of IL12, yeast cytosine deaminase and TKSR39 | Intratumoural | I | Prostate Cancer, Pancreatic Cancer | OV only | NCT02555397 | Recruiting |
| NCT03281382 | Recruiting | ||||||
| H101 | E1B deletion, partial E3 deletion | Intratumoural | I-III | Hepatocellular Carcinoma and head and neck cancer | Combination | NCT03790059 NCT03780049 | Recruiting |
| Recruiting | |||||||
| ProstAtak | TK insertion | Intratumoural | II-III | Prostate Cancer | Combination or OV only | NCT01436968 NCT02768363 | Recruiting |
| Active | |||||||
|
| |||||||
| T-VEC | ICP34.5 deletion, US11 deletion, GM-CSF insertion | Intratumoural | I-III | Melanoma, head and neck cancer and pancreatic cancer | Combination or OV only | NCT03086642 | Recruiting |
| NCT03069378 | Recruiting | ||||||
| NCT01368276 | Completed | ||||||
| HF10 | UL56 deletion, selected for single partial copy of UL52 | Intratumoural | I-II | Breast cancer, melanoma, and pancreatic cancer | Combination or OV only | NCT03153085 NCT03259425 | Completed |
| Terminated | |||||||
| HSV1716 | ICP34.5 deletion | Intratumoural | I-II | Malignant Pleural Mesothelioma, Rhabdomyosarcoma, Osteosarcoma, Anaplastic Oligodendroglioma | Combination or OV only | NCT01721018 NCT00931931 NCT02031965 | Completed |
| Completed | |||||||
| Terminated | |||||||
| G207 | ICP34.5 deletion | Intratumoural | I-II | Glioblastoma | OV only | NCT03911388 | Recruiting |
| UL39 disruption | NCT04482933 | Not yet recruiting | |||||
|
| |||||||
| MV-NIS | NIS insertion | intraperitoneal and Intratumoural | I-II | Myeloma, Ovarian cancer, Mesothelioma, NSCLC | Combination or OV only | NCT02919449 NCT02364713 | Terminated |
| Recruiting | |||||||
| MV-CEA | CEA insertion | Intraperitoneal, Intratumoural and Intravenous | I-II | Glioblastoma, Ovarian Cancer, Fallopian Tube Endometrioid Adenocarcinoma | OV only | NCT00390299 NCT00408590 NCT02068794 | Completed |
| Completed | |||||||
| Recruiting | |||||||
|
| |||||||
| Pexa-vac (JX-594) | GM-CSF insertion, TK disruption | Intratumoural and Intravenous | I-III | Melanoma, liver cancer, colorectal cancer, breast cancer, and hepatocellular carcinoma | Combination or OV only | NCT02562755 NCT00554372 NCT00629759 | Completed |
| Completed | |||||||
| Completed | |||||||
| GL-ONC1 | TK disruption, haemagglutin disruption, F14.5 L disruption | Intraperitoneal, Intratumoural and Intravenous | I-II | Lung cancer, head and neck cancer, and mesothelioma | Combination or OV only | NCT02759588 NCT01443260 | Active |
| Completed | |||||||
|
| |||||||
| Reolysin | None | Intravenous and intratumoral | I-III | Glioma, sarcomas, colorectal cancer, NSCLC, ovarian cancer, melanoma, pancreatic cancer, multiple myeloma, head and neck cancer | Combination or OV only | NCT01166542 NCT02620423 NCT01656538 | Completed |
| Completed | |||||||
| Completed | |||||||
|
| |||||||
| PV701 | None | Intravenous | I | Squamous Cell Carcinoma of the Larynx, Salivary Gland Cancer | OV only | NCT00081211 | Terminated |
| NCT00055705 | Completed | ||||||
| NDV-HUJ | None | Intravenous | I-II | Glioblastoma, Sarcoma, Neuroblastoma | OV only | NCT01174537 | Withdrawn |
|
| |||||||
| Cavatak (CVA21) | None | Intravenous and Intratumoural | I-II | Bladder Cancer, NSCLC, Uveal Melanoma, Breast Cancer, Prostate Cancer, Head and Neck Cancer | Combination or OV only | NCT00636558 NCT03408587 NCT01636882 | Completed |
| Completed | |||||||
| Complete | |||||||
|
| |||||||
| VSV-hIFNβ | IFN-β insertion | Intratumoural | I | Head and Neck Squamous Cell Carcinoma, NSCLC, Hepatocellular Carcinoma | Combination | NCT02923466 NCT01628640 | Active |
| Active |
FIGURE 3Therapeutic barriers of oncolytic viruses. There are two main barriers to the induction of antitumor effects by oncolytic viruses. (A) Macrophages can directly capture viruses in organs such as the liver. Macrophages reduce the virus titer and the antitumor effects through phagocytosis. (B) The other barrier for oncolytic viruses is blockade of host protein synthesis. Oncolytic viruses encode host closure proteins that can shut down synthesis of host proteins, destroy pre-existing polysomes, degrade host mRNAs, and interfere with the production of viral offspring. This “host shutoff” is not conducive to virus replication or the expansion of neoantigen-reactive CTLs.