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The lytic activity of VSV-GP treatment dominates the therapeutic effects in a syngeneic model of lung cancer

Menée in vitro et à l'aide de deux modèles murins de cancer du poumon, cette étude analyse l'activité lytique d'un variant du virus de la stomatite vésiculaire, administré par voie intraveineuse ou intratumorale, et démontre que la réponse immunitaire antitumorale induite par le virus est inférieure à la réponse immunitaire antivirale

Background : Oncolytic virotherapy is thought to result in direct virus-induced lytic tumour killing and simultaneous activation of innate and tumour-specific adaptive immune responses. Using a chimeric vesicular stomatitis virus variant VSV-GP, we addressed the direct oncolytic effects and the role of anti-tumour immune induction in the syngeneic mouse lung cancer model LLC1. Methods : To study a tumour system with limited antiviral effects, we generated interferon receptor-deficient cells (LLC1-IFNAR1−/−). Therapeutic efficacy of VSV-GP was assessed in vivo in syngeneic C57BL/6 and athymic nude mice bearing subcutaneous tumours. VSV-GP treatment effects were analysed using bioluminescent imaging (BLI), immunohistochemistry, ELISpot, flow cytometry, multiplex ELISA and Nanostring® assays. Results : Interferon insensitivity correlated with VSV-GP replication and therapeutic outcome. BLI revealed tumour-to-tumour spread of viral progeny in bilateral tumours. Histological and gene expression analysis confirmed widespread and rapid infection and cell killing within the tumour with activation of innate and adaptive immune-response markers. However, treatment outcome was increased in the absence of CD8+ T cells and surviving mice showed little protection from tumour re-challenge, indicating limited therapeutic contribution by the activated immune system. Conclusion : These studies present a case for a predominantly lytic treatment effect of VSV-GP in a syngeneic mouse lung cancer model.

British Journal of Cancer

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