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Pouring petrol on the flames: Using oncolytic virotherapies to enhance tumour immunogenicity

Oncolytic viruses possess the ability to infect, replicate and lyse malignantly transformed tumour cells. This oncolytic activity amplifies the therapeutic advantage and induces a form of immunogenic cell death, characterized by increased CD8( +) T‐cell infiltration into the tumour microenvironment....

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Autores principales: Teijeira Crespo, Alicia, Burnell, Stephanie, Capitani, Lorenzo, Bayliss, Rebecca, Moses, Elise, Mason, Georgina H., Davies, James A., Godkin, Andrew J., Gallimore, Awen M., Parker, Alan L.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8274202/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33638871
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/imm.13323
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author Teijeira Crespo, Alicia
Burnell, Stephanie
Capitani, Lorenzo
Bayliss, Rebecca
Moses, Elise
Mason, Georgina H.
Davies, James A.
Godkin, Andrew J.
Gallimore, Awen M.
Parker, Alan L.
author_facet Teijeira Crespo, Alicia
Burnell, Stephanie
Capitani, Lorenzo
Bayliss, Rebecca
Moses, Elise
Mason, Georgina H.
Davies, James A.
Godkin, Andrew J.
Gallimore, Awen M.
Parker, Alan L.
author_sort Teijeira Crespo, Alicia
collection PubMed
description Oncolytic viruses possess the ability to infect, replicate and lyse malignantly transformed tumour cells. This oncolytic activity amplifies the therapeutic advantage and induces a form of immunogenic cell death, characterized by increased CD8( +) T‐cell infiltration into the tumour microenvironment. This important feature of oncolytic viruses can result in the warming up of immunologically ‘cold’ tumour types, presenting the enticing possibility that oncolytic virus treatment combined with immunotherapies may enhance efficacy. In this review, we assess some of the most promising candidates that might be used for oncolytic virotherapy: immunotherapy combinations. We assess their potential as separate agents or as agents combined into a single therapy, where the immunotherapy is encoded within the genome of the oncolytic virus. The development of such advanced agents will require increasingly sophisticated model systems for their preclinical assessment and evaluation. In vivo rodent model systems are fraught with limitations in this regard. Oncolytic viruses replicate selectively within human cells and therefore require human xenografts in immune‐deficient mice for their evaluation. However, the use of immune‐deficient rodent models hinders the ability to study immune responses against any immunomodulatory transgenes engineered within the viral genome and expressed within the tumour microenvironment. There has therefore been a shift towards the use of more sophisticated ex vivo patient‐derived model systems based on organoids and explant co‐cultures with immune cells, which may be more predictive of efficacy than contrived and artificial animal models. We review the best of those model systems here.
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spelling pubmed-82742022021-07-14 Pouring petrol on the flames: Using oncolytic virotherapies to enhance tumour immunogenicity Teijeira Crespo, Alicia Burnell, Stephanie Capitani, Lorenzo Bayliss, Rebecca Moses, Elise Mason, Georgina H. Davies, James A. Godkin, Andrew J. Gallimore, Awen M. Parker, Alan L. Immunology Reviews Oncolytic viruses possess the ability to infect, replicate and lyse malignantly transformed tumour cells. This oncolytic activity amplifies the therapeutic advantage and induces a form of immunogenic cell death, characterized by increased CD8( +) T‐cell infiltration into the tumour microenvironment. This important feature of oncolytic viruses can result in the warming up of immunologically ‘cold’ tumour types, presenting the enticing possibility that oncolytic virus treatment combined with immunotherapies may enhance efficacy. In this review, we assess some of the most promising candidates that might be used for oncolytic virotherapy: immunotherapy combinations. We assess their potential as separate agents or as agents combined into a single therapy, where the immunotherapy is encoded within the genome of the oncolytic virus. The development of such advanced agents will require increasingly sophisticated model systems for their preclinical assessment and evaluation. In vivo rodent model systems are fraught with limitations in this regard. Oncolytic viruses replicate selectively within human cells and therefore require human xenografts in immune‐deficient mice for their evaluation. However, the use of immune‐deficient rodent models hinders the ability to study immune responses against any immunomodulatory transgenes engineered within the viral genome and expressed within the tumour microenvironment. There has therefore been a shift towards the use of more sophisticated ex vivo patient‐derived model systems based on organoids and explant co‐cultures with immune cells, which may be more predictive of efficacy than contrived and artificial animal models. We review the best of those model systems here. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2021-03-28 2021-08 /pmc/articles/PMC8274202/ /pubmed/33638871 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/imm.13323 Text en © 2021 The Authors. Immunology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Reviews
Teijeira Crespo, Alicia
Burnell, Stephanie
Capitani, Lorenzo
Bayliss, Rebecca
Moses, Elise
Mason, Georgina H.
Davies, James A.
Godkin, Andrew J.
Gallimore, Awen M.
Parker, Alan L.
Pouring petrol on the flames: Using oncolytic virotherapies to enhance tumour immunogenicity
title Pouring petrol on the flames: Using oncolytic virotherapies to enhance tumour immunogenicity
title_full Pouring petrol on the flames: Using oncolytic virotherapies to enhance tumour immunogenicity
title_fullStr Pouring petrol on the flames: Using oncolytic virotherapies to enhance tumour immunogenicity
title_full_unstemmed Pouring petrol on the flames: Using oncolytic virotherapies to enhance tumour immunogenicity
title_short Pouring petrol on the flames: Using oncolytic virotherapies to enhance tumour immunogenicity
title_sort pouring petrol on the flames: using oncolytic virotherapies to enhance tumour immunogenicity
topic Reviews
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8274202/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33638871
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/imm.13323
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