Cargando…

Zika virus-based immunotherapy enhances long-term survival of rodents with brain tumors through upregulation of memory T-cells

Zika virus (ZIKV) exhibits a tropism for brain tumor cells and has been used as an oncolytic virus to target brain tumors in mice with modest effects on extending median survival. Recent studies have highlighted the potential for combining virotherapy and immunotherapy to target cancer. We postulate...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Crane, Andrew T., Chrostek, Matthew R., Krishna, Venkatramana D., Shiao, Maple, Toman, Nikolas G., Pearce, Clairice M., Tran, Sarah K., Sipe, Christopher J., Guo, Winston, Voth, Joseph P., Vaid, Shivanshi, Xie, Hui, Lu, Wei-Cheng, Swanson, Will, Grande, Andrew W., Schleiss, Mark R., Bierle, Craig J., Cheeran, Maxim C-J., Low, Walter C.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7529292/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33002018
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0232858
_version_ 1783589407772639232
author Crane, Andrew T.
Chrostek, Matthew R.
Krishna, Venkatramana D.
Shiao, Maple
Toman, Nikolas G.
Pearce, Clairice M.
Tran, Sarah K.
Sipe, Christopher J.
Guo, Winston
Voth, Joseph P.
Vaid, Shivanshi
Xie, Hui
Lu, Wei-Cheng
Swanson, Will
Grande, Andrew W.
Schleiss, Mark R.
Bierle, Craig J.
Cheeran, Maxim C-J.
Low, Walter C.
author_facet Crane, Andrew T.
Chrostek, Matthew R.
Krishna, Venkatramana D.
Shiao, Maple
Toman, Nikolas G.
Pearce, Clairice M.
Tran, Sarah K.
Sipe, Christopher J.
Guo, Winston
Voth, Joseph P.
Vaid, Shivanshi
Xie, Hui
Lu, Wei-Cheng
Swanson, Will
Grande, Andrew W.
Schleiss, Mark R.
Bierle, Craig J.
Cheeran, Maxim C-J.
Low, Walter C.
author_sort Crane, Andrew T.
collection PubMed
description Zika virus (ZIKV) exhibits a tropism for brain tumor cells and has been used as an oncolytic virus to target brain tumors in mice with modest effects on extending median survival. Recent studies have highlighted the potential for combining virotherapy and immunotherapy to target cancer. We postulated that ZIKV could be used as an adjuvant to enhance the long-term survival of mice with malignant glioblastoma and generate memory T-cells capable of providing long-term immunity against cancer remission. To test this hypothesis mice bearing malignant intracranial GL261 tumors were subcutaneously vaccinated with irradiated GL261 cells previously infected with the ZIKV. Mice also received intracranial injections of live ZIKV, irradiation attenuated ZIKV, or irradiated GL261 cells previously infected with ZIKV. Long-term survivors were rechallenged with a second intracranial tumor to examine their immune response and look for the establishment of protective memory T-cells. Mice with subcutaneous vaccination plus intracranial irradiation attenuated ZIKV or intracranial irradiated GL261 cells previously infected with ZIKV exhibited the greatest extensions to overall survival. Flow cytometry analysis of immune cells within the brains of long-term surviving mice after tumor rechallenge revealed an increase in the number of T-cells, including CD4(+) and tissue-resident effector/ effector memory CD4(+) T-cells, in comparison to long-term survivors that were mock-rechallenged, and in comparison to naïve untreated mice challenged with intracranial gliomas. These results suggest that ZIKV can serve as an adjuvant to subcutaneous tumor vaccines that enhance long-term survival and generate protective tissue-resident memory CD4(+) T-cells.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-7529292
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2020
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-75292922020-10-08 Zika virus-based immunotherapy enhances long-term survival of rodents with brain tumors through upregulation of memory T-cells Crane, Andrew T. Chrostek, Matthew R. Krishna, Venkatramana D. Shiao, Maple Toman, Nikolas G. Pearce, Clairice M. Tran, Sarah K. Sipe, Christopher J. Guo, Winston Voth, Joseph P. Vaid, Shivanshi Xie, Hui Lu, Wei-Cheng Swanson, Will Grande, Andrew W. Schleiss, Mark R. Bierle, Craig J. Cheeran, Maxim C-J. Low, Walter C. PLoS One Research Article Zika virus (ZIKV) exhibits a tropism for brain tumor cells and has been used as an oncolytic virus to target brain tumors in mice with modest effects on extending median survival. Recent studies have highlighted the potential for combining virotherapy and immunotherapy to target cancer. We postulated that ZIKV could be used as an adjuvant to enhance the long-term survival of mice with malignant glioblastoma and generate memory T-cells capable of providing long-term immunity against cancer remission. To test this hypothesis mice bearing malignant intracranial GL261 tumors were subcutaneously vaccinated with irradiated GL261 cells previously infected with the ZIKV. Mice also received intracranial injections of live ZIKV, irradiation attenuated ZIKV, or irradiated GL261 cells previously infected with ZIKV. Long-term survivors were rechallenged with a second intracranial tumor to examine their immune response and look for the establishment of protective memory T-cells. Mice with subcutaneous vaccination plus intracranial irradiation attenuated ZIKV or intracranial irradiated GL261 cells previously infected with ZIKV exhibited the greatest extensions to overall survival. Flow cytometry analysis of immune cells within the brains of long-term surviving mice after tumor rechallenge revealed an increase in the number of T-cells, including CD4(+) and tissue-resident effector/ effector memory CD4(+) T-cells, in comparison to long-term survivors that were mock-rechallenged, and in comparison to naïve untreated mice challenged with intracranial gliomas. These results suggest that ZIKV can serve as an adjuvant to subcutaneous tumor vaccines that enhance long-term survival and generate protective tissue-resident memory CD4(+) T-cells. Public Library of Science 2020-10-01 /pmc/articles/PMC7529292/ /pubmed/33002018 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0232858 Text en © 2020 Crane et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Crane, Andrew T.
Chrostek, Matthew R.
Krishna, Venkatramana D.
Shiao, Maple
Toman, Nikolas G.
Pearce, Clairice M.
Tran, Sarah K.
Sipe, Christopher J.
Guo, Winston
Voth, Joseph P.
Vaid, Shivanshi
Xie, Hui
Lu, Wei-Cheng
Swanson, Will
Grande, Andrew W.
Schleiss, Mark R.
Bierle, Craig J.
Cheeran, Maxim C-J.
Low, Walter C.
Zika virus-based immunotherapy enhances long-term survival of rodents with brain tumors through upregulation of memory T-cells
title Zika virus-based immunotherapy enhances long-term survival of rodents with brain tumors through upregulation of memory T-cells
title_full Zika virus-based immunotherapy enhances long-term survival of rodents with brain tumors through upregulation of memory T-cells
title_fullStr Zika virus-based immunotherapy enhances long-term survival of rodents with brain tumors through upregulation of memory T-cells
title_full_unstemmed Zika virus-based immunotherapy enhances long-term survival of rodents with brain tumors through upregulation of memory T-cells
title_short Zika virus-based immunotherapy enhances long-term survival of rodents with brain tumors through upregulation of memory T-cells
title_sort zika virus-based immunotherapy enhances long-term survival of rodents with brain tumors through upregulation of memory t-cells
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7529292/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33002018
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0232858
work_keys_str_mv AT craneandrewt zikavirusbasedimmunotherapyenhanceslongtermsurvivalofrodentswithbraintumorsthroughupregulationofmemorytcells
AT chrostekmatthewr zikavirusbasedimmunotherapyenhanceslongtermsurvivalofrodentswithbraintumorsthroughupregulationofmemorytcells
AT krishnavenkatramanad zikavirusbasedimmunotherapyenhanceslongtermsurvivalofrodentswithbraintumorsthroughupregulationofmemorytcells
AT shiaomaple zikavirusbasedimmunotherapyenhanceslongtermsurvivalofrodentswithbraintumorsthroughupregulationofmemorytcells
AT tomannikolasg zikavirusbasedimmunotherapyenhanceslongtermsurvivalofrodentswithbraintumorsthroughupregulationofmemorytcells
AT pearceclairicem zikavirusbasedimmunotherapyenhanceslongtermsurvivalofrodentswithbraintumorsthroughupregulationofmemorytcells
AT transarahk zikavirusbasedimmunotherapyenhanceslongtermsurvivalofrodentswithbraintumorsthroughupregulationofmemorytcells
AT sipechristopherj zikavirusbasedimmunotherapyenhanceslongtermsurvivalofrodentswithbraintumorsthroughupregulationofmemorytcells
AT guowinston zikavirusbasedimmunotherapyenhanceslongtermsurvivalofrodentswithbraintumorsthroughupregulationofmemorytcells
AT vothjosephp zikavirusbasedimmunotherapyenhanceslongtermsurvivalofrodentswithbraintumorsthroughupregulationofmemorytcells
AT vaidshivanshi zikavirusbasedimmunotherapyenhanceslongtermsurvivalofrodentswithbraintumorsthroughupregulationofmemorytcells
AT xiehui zikavirusbasedimmunotherapyenhanceslongtermsurvivalofrodentswithbraintumorsthroughupregulationofmemorytcells
AT luweicheng zikavirusbasedimmunotherapyenhanceslongtermsurvivalofrodentswithbraintumorsthroughupregulationofmemorytcells
AT swansonwill zikavirusbasedimmunotherapyenhanceslongtermsurvivalofrodentswithbraintumorsthroughupregulationofmemorytcells
AT grandeandreww zikavirusbasedimmunotherapyenhanceslongtermsurvivalofrodentswithbraintumorsthroughupregulationofmemorytcells
AT schleissmarkr zikavirusbasedimmunotherapyenhanceslongtermsurvivalofrodentswithbraintumorsthroughupregulationofmemorytcells
AT bierlecraigj zikavirusbasedimmunotherapyenhanceslongtermsurvivalofrodentswithbraintumorsthroughupregulationofmemorytcells
AT cheeranmaximcj zikavirusbasedimmunotherapyenhanceslongtermsurvivalofrodentswithbraintumorsthroughupregulationofmemorytcells
AT lowwalterc zikavirusbasedimmunotherapyenhanceslongtermsurvivalofrodentswithbraintumorsthroughupregulationofmemorytcells