Efficacy of coxsackievirus A21 against drug-resistant neoplastic B cells

Primary drug resistance and minimal residual disease are major challenges in the treatment of B cell neoplasms. Therefore, this study aimed to identify a novel treatment capable of eradicating malignant B cells and drug-resistant disease. Oncolytic viruses eradicate malignant cells by direct oncolys...

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Veröffentlicht in:Molecular therapy. Oncolytics 2023-06, Vol.29, p.17-29
Hauptverfasser: Holmes, Matthew, Scott, Gina B., Heaton, Samuel, Barr, Tyler, Askar, Basem, Müller, Louise M.E., Jennings, Victoria A., Ralph, Christy, Burton, Cathy, Melcher, Alan, Hillmen, Peter, Parrish, Christopher, Errington-Mais, Fiona
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Primary drug resistance and minimal residual disease are major challenges in the treatment of B cell neoplasms. Therefore, this study aimed to identify a novel treatment capable of eradicating malignant B cells and drug-resistant disease. Oncolytic viruses eradicate malignant cells by direct oncolysis and activation of anti-tumor immunity, have proven anti-cancer efficacy, and are safe and well tolerated in clinical use. Here, we demonstrate that the oncolytic virus coxsackievirus A21 can kill a range of B cell neoplasms, irrespective of an anti-viral interferon response. Moreover, CVA21 retained its capacity to kill drug-resistant B cell neoplasms, where drug resistance was induced by co-culture with tumor microenvironment support. In some cases, CVA21 efficacy was actually enhanced, in accordance with increased expression of the viral entry receptor ICAM-1. Importantly, the data confirmed preferential killing of malignant B cells and CVA21 dependence on oncogenic B cell signaling pathways. Significantly, CVA21 also activated natural killer (NK) cells to kill neoplastic B cells and drug-resistant B cells remained susceptible to NK cell-mediated lysis. Overall, these data reveal a dual mode of action of CVA21 against drug-resistant B cells and support the development of CVA21 for the treatment of B cell neoplasms. [Display omitted] Errington-Mais and colleagues describe a dual mode of action of coxsackievirus A21 (CVA21) against neoplastic B cells. Specifically, CVA21 killed drug-resistant cells that received pro-survival signals from tumor microenvironment by oncolysis and activation of natural killer cells. Data support the development of CVA21 for the treatment of B cell malignancies.
ISSN:2372-7705
2372-7705
DOI:10.1016/j.omto.2023.03.002