Frontiers in Oncology (Dec 2020)

Cowpea Mosaic Virus Nanoparticle Enhancement of Hypofractionated Radiation in a B16 Murine Melanoma Model

  • Kayla E. A. Duval,
  • Kayla E. A. Duval,
  • Robert J. Wagner,
  • Veronique Beiss,
  • Steven N. Fiering,
  • Steven N. Fiering,
  • Nicole F. Steinmetz,
  • Nicole F. Steinmetz,
  • Nicole F. Steinmetz,
  • Nicole F. Steinmetz,
  • Nicole F. Steinmetz,
  • P. Jack Hoopes,
  • P. Jack Hoopes,
  • P. Jack Hoopes

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2020.594614
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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IntroductionVirus and virus-like nanoparticles (VNPs) have been used for a variety of preclinical treatments, including in situ anti-cancer vaccination. The Cowpea mosaic virus (CPMV) is a VNP that has shown the ability to stimulate an anti-cancer immune response. The hypothesis of this study is two-fold: that intratumoral CPMV enhances the immunogenetic and cytotoxic response of hypofractionated radiation (15 Gy or 3 x 8 Gy), and that the effect differs between fraction regimens in the murine B16 flank melanoma model.MethodsCPMV nanoparticles were delivered intratumorally, 100 μg/tumor to B16 murine melanoma flank tumors alone, and in combination with either 15 Gy or 3 x 8 Gy (3 consecutive days). Tumors were assessed for immune and cytotoxic gene and protein expression, and cytotoxic T cell infiltration 4 days post treatment. Treatment based tumor control was assessed by a 3-fold tumor growth assay.ResultsBoth CPMV and radiation alone demonstrated the activation of a number of important immune and cytotoxic genes including natural killer cell and T cell mediated cytotoxicity pathways. However, the combination treatment activated greater expression than either treatment alone. CPMV combined with a single dose of 15 Gy demonstrated greater immune and cytotoxic gene expression, protein expression, CD8+ T cell infiltration activity, and greater tumor growth delay compared to 3 x 8 Gy with CPMV.ConclusionCPMV presents a unique and promising hypofractionated radiation adjuvant that leads to increased anti-tumor cytotoxic and immune signaling, especially with respect to the immune mediated cytotoxicity, immune signaling, and toll-like receptor signaling pathways. This improvement was greater with a single dose than with a fractionated dose.

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