Affiliation:
1. Centre for Innovative Cancer Research, Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, Ottawa, ON K1H 8L6, Canada
2. Department of Biochemistry, Microbiology and Immunology, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON K1H 8M5, Canada
3. Department of Chemistry, The University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637, USA
Abstract
The approval of different cytokines as anti-neoplastic agents has been challenged by dose-limiting toxicities. Although reducing dose levels affords improved tolerability, efficacy is precluded at these suboptimal doses. Strategies combining cytokines with oncolytic viruses have proven to elicit potent survival benefits in vivo, despite promoting rapid clearance of the oncolytic virus itself. Herein, we developed an inducible expression system based on a Split-T7 RNA polymerase for oncolytic poxviruses to regulate the spatial and temporal expression of a beneficial transgene. This expression system utilizes approved anti-neoplastic rapamycin analogues for transgene induction. This treatment regimen thus offers a triple anti-tumour effect through the oncolytic virus, the induced transgene, and the pharmacologic inducer itself. More specifically, we designed our therapeutic transgene by fusing a tumour-targeting chlorotoxin (CLTX) peptide to interleukin-12 (IL-12), and demonstrated that the constructs were functional and cancer-selective. We next encoded this construct into the oncolytic vaccinia virus strain Copenhagen (VV-iIL-12mCLTX), and were able to demonstrate significantly improved survival in multiple syngeneic murine tumour models through both localized and systemic virus administration, in combination with rapalogs. In summary, our findings demonstrate that rapalog-inducible genetic switches based on Split-T7 polymerase allow for regulation of the oncolytic virus-driven production of tumour-localized IL-12 for improved anti-cancer immunotherapy.
Funder
Canadian Cancer Society Impact
Canadian Institutes of Health Research
Ontario Institute for Cancer Research
Ottawa Regional Cancer Foundation
Ottawa hospital foundation
CIHR New Investigator Award—Infection and Immunity
Terry Fox Research Institute
Lotte & John Hecht Memorial Foundation
CanPRIME/Mitacs fellowships
Taggart Parkes Fellowship
NSERC CGS-D3
Ontario Graduate Scholarship
CIHR Master’s Scholarship
CIHR postdoctoral award
National Institute of General Medical Sciences
Subject
Drug Discovery,Pharmaceutical Science,Molecular Medicine
Cited by
5 articles.
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