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Effect of the oncolytic ECHO-7 virus Rigvir® on the viability of cell lines of human origin in vitro

Background: The role of oncolytic viruses in cancer treatment is increasingly studied. The first oncolytic virus (Rigvir®, ECHO-7) was registered in Latvia over a decade ago. In a recent retrospective study Rigvir® decreased mortality 4.39-6.57-fold in stage IB-IIC melanoma patients. The aims of the...

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Autores principales: Tilgase, Andra, Patetko, Liene, Blāķe, Ilze, Ramata‑Stunda, Anna, Borodušķis, Mārtiņš, Alberts, Pēteris
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Ivyspring International Publisher 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5868171/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29581783
http://dx.doi.org/10.7150/jca.23242
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author Tilgase, Andra
Patetko, Liene
Blāķe, Ilze
Ramata‑Stunda, Anna
Borodušķis, Mārtiņš
Alberts, Pēteris
author_facet Tilgase, Andra
Patetko, Liene
Blāķe, Ilze
Ramata‑Stunda, Anna
Borodušķis, Mārtiņš
Alberts, Pēteris
author_sort Tilgase, Andra
collection PubMed
description Background: The role of oncolytic viruses in cancer treatment is increasingly studied. The first oncolytic virus (Rigvir®, ECHO-7) was registered in Latvia over a decade ago. In a recent retrospective study Rigvir® decreased mortality 4.39-6.57-fold in stage IB-IIC melanoma patients. The aims of the present study are to test the effect of Rigvir® on cell line viability in vitro and to visualize the cellular presence of Rigvir® by immunocytochemistry. Methods: The cytolytic effect of Rigvir® on the viability of FM-9, RD, AGS, A549, HDFa, HPAF‑II, MSC, MCF7, HaCaT, and Sk-Mel-28 cell lines was measured using live cell imaging. PBMC viability was measured using flow cytometry. The presence of ECHO-7 virus was visualized using immunocytochemistry. Statistical difference between treatment groups was calculated using two-way ANOVA. Results: Rigvir® (10%, volume/volume) reduced cell viability in FM-9, RD, AGS, A549, HDFa, HPAF‑II and MSC cell lines by 67-100%. HaCaT cell viability was partly affected while Rigvir® had no effect on MCF7, Sk-Mel-28 and PBMC viability. Detection of ECHO-7 by immunocytochemistry in FM-9, RD, AGS, A549, HDFa, HPAF-II and Sk-Mel-28 cell lines suggests that the presence of Rigvir® in the cells preceded or coincided with the time of reduction of cell viability. Rigvir® (10%) had no effect on live PBMC count. Conclusions: The results suggest that Rigvir® in vitro reduces the viability of cells of human melanoma, rhabdomyosarcoma, gastric adenocarcinoma, lung carcinoma, pancreas adenocarcinoma but not in PBMC. The presence of Rigvir® in the sensitive cells was confirmed using anti-ECHO-7 antibodies. The present results suggest that a mechanism of action for the clinical benefit of Rigvir® is its cytolytic properties. The present results suggest that the effect of Rigvir® could be tested in other cancers besides melanoma. Further studies of possible Rigvir® entry receptors are needed.
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spelling pubmed-58681712018-03-26 Effect of the oncolytic ECHO-7 virus Rigvir® on the viability of cell lines of human origin in vitro Tilgase, Andra Patetko, Liene Blāķe, Ilze Ramata‑Stunda, Anna Borodušķis, Mārtiņš Alberts, Pēteris J Cancer Research Paper Background: The role of oncolytic viruses in cancer treatment is increasingly studied. The first oncolytic virus (Rigvir®, ECHO-7) was registered in Latvia over a decade ago. In a recent retrospective study Rigvir® decreased mortality 4.39-6.57-fold in stage IB-IIC melanoma patients. The aims of the present study are to test the effect of Rigvir® on cell line viability in vitro and to visualize the cellular presence of Rigvir® by immunocytochemistry. Methods: The cytolytic effect of Rigvir® on the viability of FM-9, RD, AGS, A549, HDFa, HPAF‑II, MSC, MCF7, HaCaT, and Sk-Mel-28 cell lines was measured using live cell imaging. PBMC viability was measured using flow cytometry. The presence of ECHO-7 virus was visualized using immunocytochemistry. Statistical difference between treatment groups was calculated using two-way ANOVA. Results: Rigvir® (10%, volume/volume) reduced cell viability in FM-9, RD, AGS, A549, HDFa, HPAF‑II and MSC cell lines by 67-100%. HaCaT cell viability was partly affected while Rigvir® had no effect on MCF7, Sk-Mel-28 and PBMC viability. Detection of ECHO-7 by immunocytochemistry in FM-9, RD, AGS, A549, HDFa, HPAF-II and Sk-Mel-28 cell lines suggests that the presence of Rigvir® in the cells preceded or coincided with the time of reduction of cell viability. Rigvir® (10%) had no effect on live PBMC count. Conclusions: The results suggest that Rigvir® in vitro reduces the viability of cells of human melanoma, rhabdomyosarcoma, gastric adenocarcinoma, lung carcinoma, pancreas adenocarcinoma but not in PBMC. The presence of Rigvir® in the sensitive cells was confirmed using anti-ECHO-7 antibodies. The present results suggest that a mechanism of action for the clinical benefit of Rigvir® is its cytolytic properties. The present results suggest that the effect of Rigvir® could be tested in other cancers besides melanoma. Further studies of possible Rigvir® entry receptors are needed. Ivyspring International Publisher 2018-02-28 /pmc/articles/PMC5868171/ /pubmed/29581783 http://dx.doi.org/10.7150/jca.23242 Text en © Ivyspring International Publisher This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY-NC) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/). See http://ivyspring.com/terms for full terms and conditions.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Tilgase, Andra
Patetko, Liene
Blāķe, Ilze
Ramata‑Stunda, Anna
Borodušķis, Mārtiņš
Alberts, Pēteris
Effect of the oncolytic ECHO-7 virus Rigvir® on the viability of cell lines of human origin in vitro
title Effect of the oncolytic ECHO-7 virus Rigvir® on the viability of cell lines of human origin in vitro
title_full Effect of the oncolytic ECHO-7 virus Rigvir® on the viability of cell lines of human origin in vitro
title_fullStr Effect of the oncolytic ECHO-7 virus Rigvir® on the viability of cell lines of human origin in vitro
title_full_unstemmed Effect of the oncolytic ECHO-7 virus Rigvir® on the viability of cell lines of human origin in vitro
title_short Effect of the oncolytic ECHO-7 virus Rigvir® on the viability of cell lines of human origin in vitro
title_sort effect of the oncolytic echo-7 virus rigvir® on the viability of cell lines of human origin in vitro
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5868171/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29581783
http://dx.doi.org/10.7150/jca.23242
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