Litcius/Paper detail

Redirecting anti-Vaccinia virus T cell immunity for cancer treatment by AAV-mediated delivery of the VV B8R gene

Dujuan Cao, Qianqian Song, Junqi Li, Louisa S. Chard, Yuanyuan Jiang, Bin Qin, Jianyao Wang, Haoran Guo, Zhenguo Cheng, Zhimin Wang, Nicholas R. Lemoine, Shuangshuang Lu, Yaohe Wang

2022Molecular Therapy — Oncolytics11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Immunotherapies, such as immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) and chimeric antigen receptor-T (CAR-T) cells, are only efficient in a small proportion of tumor patients. One of the major reasons for this is the lack of immune cell infiltration and activation in the tumor microenvironment (TME). Recent research reported that abundant bystander CD8 + T cells targeting viral antigens exist in tumor infiltrates and that virus-specific memory T cells could be recalled to kill tumor cells. Therefore, virus-specific memory T cells may be effective candidates for tumor immunotherapy. In this study, we established subcutaneous tumor mice models that were pre-immunized with Vaccinia virus (VV) and confirmed that tumor cells with ectopic expression of the viral B8R protein could be recognized and killed by memory T cells. To create a therapeutic delivery system, we designed a recombinant adeno-associated virus (rAAV) with a modified tumor-specific promoter and used it to deliver VV B8R to tumor cells. We observed that rAAV gene therapy can retard tumor growth in VV pre-immunized mice. In summary, our study demonstrates that rAAV containing a tumor-specific promoter to restrict VV B8R gene expression to tumor cells is a potential therapeutic agent for cancer treatment in VV pre-immunized or VV-treated mice bearing tumors.

Topics & Concepts

VacciniaChimeric antigen receptorImmune systemVirusBystander effectCD8Tumor microenvironmentImmunotherapyVirologyImmunologyCytotoxic T cellAntigenImmunityBiologyCancer researchMedicineGeneRecombinant DNABiochemistryIn vitroVirus-based gene therapy researchCAR-T cell therapy researchImmunotherapy and Immune Responses