4.7 Article

Constitutive low expression of antiviral effectors sensitizes melanoma cells to a novel oncolytic virus

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CANCER
Volume 148, Issue 9, Pages 2321-2334

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ijc.33401

Keywords

antiviral signaling; epigenetic regulation; Epizootic Hemorrhagic Disease Virus; interferon; melanoma; pattern recognition receptors; STAT1; viral oncolysis

Categories

Funding

  1. Colton-Nadal Fund
  2. Dr. Miriam and Sheldon G. Adelson Medical Research Foundation
  3. Emerson Collective Cancer Research Fund
  4. Israel Cancer Association [20200132]
  5. Israel Science Foundation [1966/18]
  6. SPARK Initative

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STAT1 is a critical mediator of IFN signaling and antiviral responses, with its expression correlating with >700 genes in melanoma patient samples. Oncolytic virus EHDV-TAU targets melanomas with low STAT1 expression and reverses this deficiency using epigenetic modifiers, while inducing immune-stimulatory responses.
STAT1 is a critical effector and a target gene of interferon (IFN) signaling, and thus a central mediator of antiviral responses. As both a mediator and a target of IFN signals, STAT1 expression reports on, and determines IFN activity. Gene expression analyses of melanoma patient samples revealed varied levels of STAT1 expression, which highly correlated with expression of >700 genes. The ability of oncolytic viruses to exploit tumor-induced defects to antiviral responses suggests that oncolytic viruses may efficiently target a subset of melanomas, yet these should be defined. We modeled this scenario with murine B16F10 melanomas, immortalized skin fibroblasts as controls and a novel oncolytic virus, EHDV-TAU. In B16F10 cells, constitutive low expression of STAT1 and its target genes, which included intracellular pattern recognition receptors (PRRs), correlated with their inability to mount IFN-based antiviral responses upon EHDV-TAU challenge, and with potency of EHDV-TAU-induced oncolysis. This underexpression of interferon stimulated genes (ISGs) and PRRs, and the inability of EHDV-TAU to induce their expression, were reversed by epigenetic modifiers, suggesting epigenetic silencing as a basis for their underexpression. Despite their inability to mount IFN/STAT-based responses upon viral infection, EHDV-TAU infected B16F10 cells secreted immune-stimulatory chemokines. Accordingly, in vivo, EHDV-TAU enhanced intratumoral infiltration of cytotoxic T-cells and reduced growth of local and distant tumors. We propose that STAT1 signatures should guide melanoma virotherapy treatments, and that oncolytic viruses such as EHDV-TAU have the potential to exploit the cellular context of low-STAT1 tumors.

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