Patient-derived head and neck tumor slice cultures: a versatile tool to study oncolytic virus action

Head and neck cancer etiology and architecture is quite diverse and complex, impeding the prediction whether a patient could respond to a particular cancer immunotherapy or combination treatment. A concomitantly arising caveat is obviously the translation from pre-clinical, cell based in vitro syste...

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Veröffentlicht in:Scientific reports 2022-09, Vol.12 (1), p.15334-15334, Article 15334
Hauptverfasser: Runge, Annette, Mayr, Melissa, Schwaiger, Theresa, Sprung, Susanne, Chetta, Paolo, Gottfried, Timo, Dudas, Jozsef, Greier, Maria C., Glatz, Marlies C., Haybaeck, Johannes, Elbers, Knut, Riechelmann, Herbert, Erlmann, Patrik, Petersson, Monika
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Head and neck cancer etiology and architecture is quite diverse and complex, impeding the prediction whether a patient could respond to a particular cancer immunotherapy or combination treatment. A concomitantly arising caveat is obviously the translation from pre-clinical, cell based in vitro systems as well as syngeneic murine tumor models towards the heterogeneous architecture of the human tumor ecosystems. To bridge this gap, we have established and employed a patient-derived HNSCC (head and neck squamous cell carcinoma) slice culturing system to assess immunomodulatory effects as well as permissivity and oncolytic virus (OV) action. The heterogeneous contexture of the human tumor ecosystem including tumor cells, cancer-associated fibroblasts and immune cells was preserved in our HNSCC slice culturing approach. Importantly, the immune cell compartment remained to be functional and cytotoxic T-cells could be activated by immunostimulatory antibodies. In addition, we uncovered that a high proportion of the patient-derived HNSCC slice cultures were susceptible to the OV VSV-GP. More specifically, VSV-GP infects a broad spectrum of tumor-associated lineages including epithelial and stromal cells and can induce apoptosis. In sum, this human tumor ex vivo platform might complement pre-clinical studies to eventually propel cancer immune-related drug discovery and ease the translation to the clinics.
ISSN:2045-2322
2045-2322
DOI:10.1038/s41598-022-19555-0