4.5 Article

Potent anti-tumor effects of receptor-retargeted syncytial oncolytic herpes simplex virus

Journal

MOLECULAR THERAPY-ONCOLYTICS
Volume 22, Issue -, Pages 265-276

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.omto.2021.08.002

Keywords

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Funding

  1. FACS Core Laboratory
  2. Institute of Medical Science, The University of Tokyo
  3. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology of Japan [18H02687, 18K19468, 17H01578]
  4. Waksman Foundation of Japan
  5. Novartis Foundation Japan for the Promotion of Science
  6. SEI Group CSR Foundation
  7. Ono Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd.
  8. Pathology Laboratory
  9. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [17H01578, 18H02687, 18K19468] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Researchers have developed a more potent oncolytic herpes simplex virus that can effectively treat various tumors through injection; this virus can induce long-lasting tumor cell syncytia in vivo, resulting in strong killing effects on the tumors.
Most oncolytic virotherapy has thus far employed viruses deficient in genes essential for replication in normal cells but not in cancer cells. Intra-tumoral injection of such viruses has resulted in clinically significant anti-tumor effects on the lesions in the vicinity of the injection sites but not on distant visceral metastases. To overcome this limitation, we have developed a receptor-retargeted oncolytic herpes simplex virus employing a single-chain antibody for targeting tumor-associated antigens (RR-oHSV) and its modified version with additional mutations conferring syncytium formation (RRsyn-oHSV). We previously showed that RRsyn-oHSV exhibits preserved antigen specificity and an similar to 20-fold higher tumoricidal potency in vitro relative to RR-oHSV. Here, we investigated the in vivo anti-tumor effects of RRsyn-oHSV using human cancer xenografts in immunodeficient mice. With only a single intra-tumoral injection of RRsyn-oHSV at very low doses, all treated tumors regressed completely. Furthermore, intravenous administration of RRsyn-oHSV resulted in robust anti-tumor effects even against large tumors. We found that these potent anti-tumor effects of RRsyn-oHSV may be associated with the formation of long-lasting tumor cell syncytia not containing non-cancerous cells that appear to trigger death of the syncytia. These results strongly suggest that cancer patients with distant metastases could be effectively treated with our RRsyn-oHSV.

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