Molecular Therapy: Oncology (Sep 2024)

Oncolytic vaccinia virus harboring CLEC2A gene enhances viral replication and antitumor efficacy

  • Chunqing Gao,
  • Qi Ying,
  • Yufeng Qiu,
  • Ningbo Ren,
  • Kan Chen,
  • Yanrong Zhou,
  • Ting Ye,
  • Gongchu Li

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 32, no. 3
p. 200823

Abstract

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In the field of innovative cancer treatment strategies, oncolytic vaccinia virus (VV)es have gained traction as promising vectors. In the current study, we inserted the human C-type lectin domain family 2 member A (CLEC2A) gene into VV, creating a replicating therapeutic, oncoVV-CLEC2A. The findings reveal that oncoVV-CLEC2A effectively suppresses colorectal proliferation of mouse xenografts and a range of human cancer cell lines by augmenting viral reproduction capabilities, including the lung cancer H460 cell line, colorectal cancer cell lines (HCT116 and SW620), and hepatocellular carcinoma HuH-7 cell line. Moreover, it is evident that oncoVV-CLEC2A can induce antitumor immunity by boosting cytokine production but not antivirus response, and enhancing calreticulin expression. Further investigation indicates that oncoVV-CLEC2A can enhance antitumor capabilities by activating natural killer cells to produce interferon-γ and induce M1-like macrophage polarization. These findings shed light on the antitumor mechanisms of oncoVV-CLEC2A, provide a theoretical basis for oncolytic therapies, and lay the groundwork for novel strategies for modifying VVs.

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