| Literature DB >> 35327364 |
Abstract
Oncolytic viruses represent interesting anti-cancer agents with high tumor selectivity and immune stimulatory potential. The present review provides an update of the molecular mechanisms of the anti-neoplastic and immune stimulatory properties of the avian paramyxovirus, Newcastle Disease Virus (NDV). The anti-neoplastic activities of NDV include (i) the endocytic targeting of the GTPase Rac1 in Ras-transformed human tumorigenic cells; (ii) the switch from cellular protein to viral protein synthesis and the induction of autophagy mediated by viral nucleoprotein NP; (iii) the virus replication mediated by viral RNA polymerase (large protein (L), associated with phosphoprotein (P)); (iv) the facilitation of NDV spread in tumors via the membrane budding of the virus progeny with the help of matrix protein (M) and fusion protein (F); and (v) the oncolysis via apoptosis, necroptosis, pyroptosis, or ferroptosis associated with immunogenic cell death. A special property of this oncolytic virus consists of its potential for breaking therapy resistance in human cancer cells. Eight examples of this important property are presented and explained. In healthy human cells, NDV infection activates the RIG-MAVs immune signaling pathway and establishes an anti-viral state based on a strong and uninhibited interferon α,ß response. The review also describes the molecular determinants and mechanisms of the NDV-mediated immune stimulatory effects, in which the viral hemagglutinin-neuraminidase (HN) protein plays a prominent role. The six viral proteins provide oncolytic NDV with a special profile in the treatment of cancer.Entities:
Keywords: NK cell; T cell; autophagy; cancer immunotherapy; cancer therapy resistance; cancer vaccine; dendritic cell; exosome; immunogenic cell death; interferon-Ι
Year: 2022 PMID: 35327364 PMCID: PMC8945571 DOI: 10.3390/biomedicines10030562
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomedicines ISSN: 2227-9059
NDV-mediated anti-neoplastic effects.
| Feature | Mol Det | Year | Comment | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tumor-selective | eIF2α-P | 2006 | Shut-off of host cell protein | [32] |
| eIF2α-CHOP-BcL-2/JNK; | 2019 | UPR signaling; | [45] | |
| Resistance of normal cells | PKR, RIG-I, IRF3,IFNß,IRF7 | 2006 | Kinetics and expression level high | [32] |
| ppp-RNA Leader | 2005 | Innate immunity activation; | [39] | |
| Oncolysis-independent effects | HN; | 1997, 1998 | Augmented adhesiveness; | [72,138,140] |
| Augmented checkpoint inhibitory effects | 2014 | Lysis-independent immune stimulation | [84] | |
| Syncytium formation | F and HN | 2004 | High cell surface expression; | [61] |
| rVSV-NDV (F + HN) | 2018 | Platform for treatment of HCC | [63] | |
| Breaking therapy resistances | costimulation | 2000 | T cell tolerance; | [82] |
eIF2α-P = phosphorylated eucaryotic translation initiation factor 2α; eIF4E-NP = viral nucleoprotein bound to this distinct protein of the eucaryotic translation initiation factor complex; CHOP = C/EBP-homologous protein; BCL2 = mitochondrial anti-apoptotic protein: JNK = c-Jun-N-terminal kinase; IFN = interferon; UPR = unfolded protein response; RIG-I = retinoic acid inducible gene I; IRF = interferon regulatory factor; ISG = interferon stimulated gene; CAM = Cell adhesion molecule, upregulated upon NDV infection of tumor cells; rVSV = recombinant Vesicular stomatitis virus vector; HCC = hepatocellular carcinoma; Rac1 = small Rho GTPase; HIF = hypoxia-inducible factor, an oxygen-sensitive transcription factor; BcL-xL = B-cell lymphoma-extra-large, an anti-apoptotic BcL-2 protein of the mitochondrial membrane; TRIF = TIR domain-containing adapter-inducing interferon ß, a necrosis pathway; TLR4 = lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-receptor-inducing pro-inflammatory signaling; NFkB = nuclear factor kappa B; Livin = a member of the human inhibitor of apoptosis proteins family; p53 = a tumor suppressor and significant player in normal and cancer immunity; xP− = a membrane antiporter for uptake of extracellular cystin; GBM = Glioblastoma multiforme. Mol det = Molecular determinant.
NDV mediated immune cell activation.
| Feature | Mol Det | Year | Comment | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NK cell activation | HN-NKp46 | 2009 | NKpCD3-lacZ-inducible | [ |
| HN; TRAIL; | 2017 | IFN-γ independent | [ | |
| Macrophage activation | NFκB; NO | 1996 | In vitro | [ |
| IL1ß; NLRP3 | 2016 | Human; Mouse | [ | |
| Monocyte activation | TRAIL; RIG-I; | 2003 | Viral replication not required | [ |
| Dendritic cell activation | IFN-α; IL-15; | 2002 | Human MTC | [ |
| 24 TFs | 2010 | Uninhibited anti-viral response | [ | |
| TLR4/NFkB | 2017 | DC migration | [ | |
| T cell activation | HN | 1993 | CD8+ CTL | [ |
| ATV-NDV | 1989 | CD4+ Th | [ | |
| Costimulation | 2000 | Breaking T-cell tolerance | [ | |
| Breaking resistance to | TRAIL | 2014 | A role of | [ |
| Anti-viral immunity | 2018 | Anti-NDV immunity | [ | |
| Immune checkpoint blockade | 2014 | Abscopal effect on metastases | [ | |
| ICD | TRAIL; ROS; IFN-I; TNF-α; RANTES; IP-10; Ecto-CRT; HSP; HMGB1; viral RNA, HN | 2003 | Immunogenic apoptosis and tumor cell necroptosis | [ |
Nkp46 = natural cytotoxicity receptor; NKpCD3-lacZ = a fusion protein composed of NKp46, the T cell receptor signaling chain CD3ζ and ß-galactosidase coded by the lacZ gene; Syk = spleen tyrosine kinase; NFκB = nuclear factor kappa B; NO = nitric oxide; NLRP3 = inflammasome, a multimeric cytosolic protein complex causing maturation of precursor forms of IL-1ß and IL-18 into active proinflammatory cytokines, thus mediating pyroptosis; TRAIL = tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand; ISG-12a = IFN-stimulated gene (ISG)-12a; RIG-I = retinoic acid inducible gene I; IRF = interferon regulatory factor; IL = interleukin; DC1 = a polarized dendritic cell; MTC = memory T cell; IO-VACR = NDV oncolysate pulsed dendritic cell vaccine; DNGR-1 = a receptor that binds dead cell debris and facilitates cross-presentation of corpse-associated antigens; TF = transcription factor; CCR7 = a chemokine receptor; VLP = virus-like particle; Th1 = CD4+ T helper 1 cell type; CTL = CD8+ cytotoxic T lymphocyte; ICD = immunogenic cell death; eIF2α-CHOP = see Table 1; TRAIL = tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand; ROS = reactive oxygen species; IFN-I = type I IFN; TNF-α = tumor necrosis factor α; RANTES = chemokine; IP-10 = chemokine; Ecto-CRT = plasma membrane expressed calreticulin; HSP = heat shock protein; HMGB1 = high mobility group box 1 protein; viral RNA = ppp-Leader and double-stranded (ds) RNA; HN = hemagglutinin-neuraminidase protein of NDV. Mol det = Molecular determinant.
Figure 1Schematic illustration of mechanisms of anti-tumor activity of NDV. This is exemplified with a migratory and invasive glioblastoma (GBM) cell. The direction of cell movement is accompanied by an increase in Rac1 expression from the trailing edge (left) to the leading edge at the lamellipodia (right) [151]. 1. Macropinocytosis/endocytosis of NDV-targeting Rac1, which plays a cardinal role in oncogenic alterations and in the development of drug resistance [152]. The direction of cell movement is accompanied by an increase in Rac1 expression from the trailing edge (left) to the leading edge at the lamellipodia (right) [151]. 2. Targeting the cap-dependent translational machinery; viral mRNA to protein translation in the cytosol and later in the double-membraned autophagosome (see GBM). This is achieved through the MNK1/2-eIF4E axis [35,36]. 3. Tumor-selective virus replication in autophagosomes. The clam shaped symbol stands for the helical nucleocapsid structure composed of L, P, and NP proteins [5,6]. 4. Virus progeny encapsulation, budding, and virus release mediated via M, HN, and F. 5. Antiviral response of healthy normal cells, including immune cells (APC, T, NK) initiated through recognition of HN by NKp46 and other PAMPs by TLRs and RLRs leading to IFN-I secretion and to DC1 and Th1 polarized adaptive immunity responses. 6. NDV-induced tumor cell death responses (oncolysis). These involve extrinsic (immune-mediated) and intrinsic cell death signaling pathways [98]. ICD-derived components feed into APCs which present TAAs to T cells. Several rounds of such cycles (1–6) drive oncolytic effects and lead to immunological memory and systemic antitumor immunity.