4.7 Article

In Vivo Tracking for Oncolytic Adenovirus Interactions with Liver Cells

Journal

BIOMEDICINES
Volume 10, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/biomedicines10071697

Keywords

adenovirus; liver; hepatotoxicity; zeiosis; neutrophils; CD8+ T cells; intravital microscopy

Funding

  1. Russian Science Foundation [20-15-00167]

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Hepatotoxicity is a problem in adenovirus cancer therapy, caused by Kupffer cell death and hepatocyte transduction. The interaction between adenovirus and liver cells is not well understood. This study used intravital microscopy to track the infection and immune response in mouse livers after adenovirus injection, and found that Ad5-RGD and Ad5/3 caused macrophage deformation and virus release, but neutrophils and CD8+ T cells did not affect the rate or dynamics of liver infection. Ad5-RGD failed to complete the replicative cycle in hepatocytes, but enhanced liver transduction during hepatic regeneration.
Hepatotoxicity remains an as yet unsolved problem for adenovirus (Ad) cancer therapy. The toxic effects originate both from rapid Kupffer cell (KCs) death (early phase) and hepatocyte transduction (late phase). Several host factors and capsid components are known to contribute to hepatotoxicity, however, the complex interplay between Ad and liver cells is not fully understood. Here, by using intravital microscopy, we aimed to follow the infection and immune response in mouse liver from the first minutes up to 72 h post intravenous injection of three Ads carrying delta-24 modification (Ad5-RGD, Ad5/3, and Ad5/35). At 15-30 min following the infusion of Ad5-RGD and Ad5/3 (but not Ad5/35), the virus-bound macrophages demonstrated signs of zeiosis: the formation of long-extended protrusions and dynamic membrane blebbing with the virus release into the blood in the membrane-associated vesicles. Although real-time imaging revealed interactions between the neutrophils and virus-bound KCs within minutes after treatment, and long-term contacts of CD8+ T cells with transduced hepatocytes at 24-72 h, depletion of neutrophils and CD8+ T cells affected neither rate nor dynamics of liver infection. Ad5-RGD failed to complete replicative cycle in hepatocytes, and transduced cells remained impermeable for propidium iodide, with a small fraction undergoing spontaneous apoptosis. In Ad5-RGD-immune mice, the virus neither killed KCs nor transduced hepatocytes, while in the setting of hepatic regeneration, Ad5-RGD enhanced liver transduction. The clinical and biochemical signs of hepatotoxicity correlated well with KC death, but not hepatocyte transduction. Real-time in vivo tracking for dynamic interactions between virus and host cells provides a better understanding of mechanisms underlying Ad-related hepatotoxicity.

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