Viral-Porphyrin Combo: Photodynamic and Oncolytic Viral Therapy for Potent Glioblastoma Treatment

Combined viral and photodynamic therapy for oncological diseases has great potential to treat aggressive tumors such as glioblastomas. A conjugate of vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) with protoporphyrin IX was prepared, and its oncolytic effects were studied and compared to the effects of the indivi...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of molecular sciences 2024-12, Vol.25 (23), p.12578
Hauptverfasser: Nazarenko, Alina S, Shkirdova, Alena O, Orlova, Ekaterina A, Biryukova, Yulia K, Vorovitch, Mikhail F, Kolyasnikova, Nadezhda M, Ishmukhametov, Aydar A, Tyurin, Vladimir S, Zamilatskov, Ilya A
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Combined viral and photodynamic therapy for oncological diseases has great potential to treat aggressive tumors such as glioblastomas. A conjugate of vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) with protoporphyrin IX was prepared, and its oncolytic effects were studied and compared to the effects of the individual components. The VSV showed an oncolytic effect on glioblastoma cell lines T98G and LN229 at a virus titer of 10 TCID /mL. A VSV titer of 10 TCID /mL was sufficient for neuroblastoma cell death. A study of the effect of VSV in tumor 3D cell modeling found that VSV had a clear viral cytopathic effect on spheroids of T98G and LN229 cells. Conjugation with the porphyrin significantly reduced the viral titer, but when irradiated, lysis of cells was observed. Photodynamic treatment of T98G and LN229 cells and spheroids with protoporphyrin IX as a photosensitizer also had a cytotoxic effect on cells and, to a lesser extent, on the tumoroids, as complete cell death was not achieved for the tumoroids. The combination therapy, which involved sequential photodynamic therapy using protoporphyrin IX as a photosensitizer and treatment with VSV, was shown to significantly enhance efficacy, resulting in complete cell death of both T98G and LN229 cells and tumoroids. The combination treatment allowed for the use of a lower viral titer (10 -10 TCID /mL) and a lower porphyrin concentration (0.5 μg/mL) to achieve a significant cytotoxic effect. As a result, the implementation of this combination therapy would likely lead to fewer side effects from the treatment. This study clearly demonstrated the excellent perspectives of combination therapy for the treatment of highly aggressive tumors such as glioblastomas.
ISSN:1422-0067
1661-6596
1422-0067
DOI:10.3390/ijms252312578