Eradication of Solid Human Breast Tumors in Nude Mice with an Intravenously Injected Light-emitting Oncolytic Vaccinia Virus
Overview
Authors
Affiliations
Previously, we reported that a recombinant vaccinia virus (VACV) carrying a light-emitting fusion gene enters, replicates in, and reveals the locations of tumors in mice. A new recombinant VACV, GLV-1h68, as a simultaneous diagnostic and therapeutic agent, was constructed by inserting three expression cassettes (encoding Renilla luciferase-Aequorea green fluorescent protein fusion, beta-galactosidase, and beta-glucuronidase) into the F14.5L, J2R (encoding thymidine kinase) and A56R (encoding hemagglutinin) loci of the viral genome, respectively. I.v. injections of GLV-1h68 (1x10(7) plaque-forming unit per mouse) into nude mice with established (approximately 300-500 mm3) s.c. GI-101A human breast tumors were used to evaluate its toxicity, tumor targeting specificity, and oncolytic efficacy. GLV-1h68 showed an enhanced tumor targeting specificity and much reduced toxicity compared with its parental LIVP strains. The tumors colonized by GLV-1h68 exhibited growth, inhibition, and regression phases followed by tumor eradication within 130 days in 95% of the mice tested. Tumor regression in live animals was monitored in real time based on decreasing light emission, hence demonstrating the concept of a combined oncolytic virus-mediated tumor diagnosis and therapy system. Transcriptional profiling of regressing tumors based on a mouse-specific platform revealed gene expression signatures consistent with immune defense activation, inclusive of IFN-stimulated genes (STAT-1 and IRF-7), cytokines, chemokines, and innate immune effector function. These findings suggest that immune activation may combine with viral oncolysis to induce tumor eradication in this model, providing a novel perspective for the design of oncolytic viral therapies for human cancers.
Yurttas C, Beil J, Berchtold S, Smirnow I, Kloker L, Sipos B Cancers (Basel). 2024; 16(2).
PMID: 38254857 PMC: 10814383. DOI: 10.3390/cancers16020368.
Tumor Tropism of DNA Viruses for Oncolytic Virotherapy.
Enow J, Sheikh H, Rahman M Viruses. 2023; 15(11).
PMID: 38005938 PMC: 10675630. DOI: 10.3390/v15112262.
Oncolytic Viruses and Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors: The "Hot" New Power Couple.
Lovatt C, Parker A Cancers (Basel). 2023; 15(16).
PMID: 37627206 PMC: 10453115. DOI: 10.3390/cancers15164178.
Li M, Zhang M, Ye Q, Liu Y, Qian W Cancer Biol Med. 2023; 20(9).
PMID: 37615308 PMC: 10546091. DOI: 10.20892/j.issn.2095-3941.2023.0202.
Karnik I, Her Z, Neo S, Liu W, Chen Q Pharmaceutics. 2023; 15(6).
PMID: 37376049 PMC: 10305679. DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics15061600.