4.7 Article

Semireplication-competent vesicular stomatitis virus as a novel platform for oncolytic virotherapy

Journal

JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR MEDICINE-JMM
Volume 90, Issue 8, Pages 959-970

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00109-012-0863-6

Keywords

Vesicular stomatitis virus; Oncolytic virus; Virotherapy; Malignant glioma

Funding

  1. Wilhelm-Sander-Foundation
  2. Schering foundation Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (Graduate College) [1172]

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Among oncolytic viruses, the vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) is especially potent and a highly promising agent for the treatment of cancer. But, even though effective against multiple tumor entities in preclinical animal models, replication-competent VSV exhibits inherent neurovirulence, which has so far hindered clinical development. To overcome this limitation, replication-defective VSV vectors for cancer gene therapy have been tested and proven to be safe. However, gene delivery was inefficient and only minor antitumor efficacy was observed. Here, we present semireplication-competent vector systems for VSV (srVSV), composed of two trans-complementing, propagation-deficient VSV vectors. The de novo generated deletion mutants of the two VSV polymerase proteins P (phosphoprotein) and L (large catalytic subunit), VSV Delta P and VSV Delta L respectively, were used mutually or in combination with VSV Delta G vectors. These srVSV systems copropagated in vitro and in vivo without recombinatory reversion to replication-competent virus. The srVSV systems were highly lytic for human glioblastoma cell lines, spheroids, and subcutaneous xenografts. Especially the combination of VSV Delta G/VSV Delta L vectors was as potent as wild-type VSV (VSV-WT) in vitro and induced long-term tumor regression in vivo without any associated adverse effects. In contrast, 90% of VSV-WT-treated animals succumbed to neurological disease shortly after tumor clearance. Most importantly, even when injected into the brain, VSV Delta G/VSV Delta L did not show any neurotoxicity. In conclusion, srVSV is a promising platform for virotherapeutic approaches and also for VSV-based vector vaccines, combining improved safety with an increased coding capacity for therapeutic transgenes, potentially allowing for multipronged approaches.

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