Abstract

Simple SummaryAn optimum cancer therapeutic virus should embody unique properties, including an ability to: Selectively procreate and kill tumor but not normal cells; produce a secreted therapeutic molecule (with broad-acting anti-cancer effects on primary and distant metastatic cells because of potent “bystander” activity); and monitor therapy non-invasively by imaging primary and distant metastatic cancers. We previously created a broad-spectrum, cancer-selective and replication competent therapeutic adenovirus that embodies two of these properties, i.e., specifically reproduces in cancer cells and produces a therapeutic cytokine, MDA-7/IL-24, a “cancer terminator virus” (CTV). We now expand on this concept and demonstrate the feasibility of producing a tripartite CTV (TCTV) selectively expressing three genes from three distinct promoters that replicate in the cancer cells while producing MDA-7/IL-24 and an imaging gene (i.e., luciferase). This novel first-in-class tripartite “theranostic” TCTV expands the utility of therapeutic viruses to non-invasively image and selectively destroy primary tumors and metastases.Combining cancer-selective viral replication and simultaneous production of a therapeutic cytokine, with potent “bystander” anti-tumor activity, are hallmarks of the cancer terminator virus (CTV). To expand on these attributes, we designed a next generation CTV that additionally enables simultaneous non-invasive imaging of tumors targeted for eradication. A unique tripartite CTV “theranostic” adenovirus (TCTV) has now been created that employs three distinct promoters to target virus replication, cytokine production and imaging capabilities uniquely in cancer cells. Conditional replication of the TCTV is regulated by a cancer-selective (truncated PEG-3) promoter, the therapeutic component, MDA-7/IL-24, is under a ubiquitous (CMV) promoter, and finally the imaging capabilities are synchronized through another cancer selective (truncated tCCN1) promoter. Using in vitro studies and clinically relevant in vivo models of breast and prostate cancer, we demonstrate that incorporating a reporter gene for imaging does not compromise the exceptional therapeutic efficacy of our previously reported bipartite CTV. This TCTV permits targeted treatment of tumors while monitoring tumor regression, with potential to simultaneously detect metastasis due to the cancer-selective activity of reporter gene expression. This “theranostic” virus provides a new genetic tool for distinguishing and treating localized and metastatic cancers.

Highlights

  • Noninvasive imaging for cancer diagnosis, as a means of guiding therapy, is critical for improving clinical outcomes in patients with diverse localized and distant tumors [1,2,3]

  • We describe a generation cancer terminator virus (CTV), a tripartite CTV (TCTV), in which replication is controlled by the truncated progression elevated gene-3 (PEG-3) promoter, expression of mda-7/IL-24 is under transcriptional regulation of the CMV promoter, and a luciferase gene is regulated by a truncated truncated cellular communication network factor 1 (tCCN1) promoter

  • Similar infection with any of these viruses did not inhibit proliferation in primary breast epithelial cells or normal immortal prostate epithelial cells (Figure 2C,D). These findings indicate that, as observed previously with Ad.5-CTV [44,58,59,60], in Ad.5-tripartite CTV “theranostic” adenovirus (TCTV)-infected cells the truncated PEG-promoter allowed adenovirus replication in cancer cells, whereas normal cells were protected from growth inhibition because of the absence of adenovirus replication [55,62], and tumor suppressor transgene expression

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Summary

Introduction

Noninvasive imaging for cancer diagnosis, as a means of guiding therapy, is critical for improving clinical outcomes in patients with diverse localized and distant (metastatic) tumors [1,2,3]. MDA-7/IL-24 selectively induces apoptosis and/or toxic autophagy in a broad spectrum of cancer cell types, including breast cancer [27,29,30,31,32,33,34], prostate cancer [25,35,36,37,38], melanoma [31,34,39,40,41,42,43,44,45], glioblastoma multiforme [22,24,46,47,48,49], neuroblastoma [50], lung [14,21,23,26,28], and numerous other cancers [7,8,13,15,17] It does not promote similar changes in normal cells and has not shown toxicity in pre-clinical animal models of cancer [7,8,13,15,17] or in patients with advanced cancers that received direct intratumoral injection with an mda-7/IL-24 expressing replication incompetent type 5 adenovirus in a Phase I clinical trial [15,17,18,19,20]

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