Brain Research Centre and Neurosurgery Division, Department of Surgery, University of British Columbia, Canada.
Curr Pharm Biotechnol. 2012 Jul;13(9):1786-94. doi: 10.2174/138920112800958751.
Herpes simplex virus (HSV) is a well-known vector that is often used for gene therapy to treat cancers. The most attractive feature of HSV is its ability to destroy tumors through a distinctive oncolytic mechanism where the virus can destroy cancer cells via cell lysis, a killing function that no anti-cancer drugs can mimic. Importantly, HSV is a safe and effective virus that can be easily manipulated to preferentially replicate in tumor cells. In the last 20 years of reengineering efforts, a number of HSV designs, including the classical G207, have been focused on deleting viral genes in order to render the virus tumor specific. Although such designs can successfully destroy tumor xenografts in animal models, with minimal impact on normal tissues, a common trade-off is the marked attenuation of the virus. This problem is most profound in many clinical tumors, where virus dissemination is often hindered by the difficult cellular and molecular terrain of the human tumor mass. In order to harness all of HSV's replication potential to destroy tumor cells, efforts in our lab, as well as others, last several years have been focused on engineering an oncolytic HSV to target tumor cells without deleting any viral genes, and have since generated highly tumor specific viruses including our transcriptional translational dually regulated HSV (TTDR-HSV). In this review, we will discuss the improvements associated with the newer TTDR-HSV design compared to the classical defective HSV designs such as G207 and tk- HSV. Lastly, we will review additional cellular features of aggressive tumors, such as their immense cellular heterogeneity and volatility, which may serve to hinder the dissemintation of TTDR-HSV. The challenge for future studies would be to explore how TTDRHSV could be redesigned and/or employed with combinatorial approaches to better target and destroy the heterogeneous and dynamic cell populations in the aggressive tumor mass.
单纯疱疹病毒(HSV)是一种众所周知的载体,常用于基因治疗癌症。HSV 最吸引人的特点是其通过独特的溶瘤机制破坏肿瘤的能力,病毒可以通过细胞裂解破坏癌细胞,而这种杀伤功能是没有任何抗癌药物可以模拟的。重要的是,HSV 是一种安全有效的病毒,可以很容易地被操纵以优先在肿瘤细胞中复制。在过去 20 年的基因改造努力中,许多 HSV 设计,包括经典的 G207,都专注于删除病毒基因,以使病毒具有肿瘤特异性。虽然这些设计可以成功地在动物模型中破坏肿瘤异种移植物,对正常组织的影响最小,但一个常见的权衡是病毒的明显衰减。在许多临床肿瘤中,这个问题最为突出,病毒的传播常常受到人类肿瘤块中复杂的细胞和分子环境的阻碍。为了利用 HSV 的所有复制潜力来破坏肿瘤细胞,我们实验室以及其他实验室多年来的努力都集中在工程化溶瘤 HSV 以靶向肿瘤细胞而不删除任何病毒基因上,并由此产生了高度肿瘤特异性的病毒,包括我们的转录翻译双重调节 HSV(TTDR-HSV)。在这篇综述中,我们将讨论与经典缺陷 HSV 设计(如 G207 和 tk-HSV)相比,新型 TTDR-HSV 设计的改进。最后,我们将回顾侵袭性肿瘤的其他细胞特征,如其巨大的细胞异质性和不稳定性,这可能阻碍 TTDR-HSV 的传播。未来研究的挑战将是探索如何重新设计 TTDR-HSV 并/或与组合方法一起使用,以更好地靶向和破坏侵袭性肿瘤块中异质和动态的细胞群体。