We recently demonstrated efficient antitumor immunity against murine tumors using dendritic cells (DCs) activated by recombinant Sendai viruses (rSeVs), and proposed a new concept, “immunostimulatory virotherapy,” for cancer immunotherapy. However, there has been little information on the efficacy of this method in preventing metastatic diseases. In this study, we investigated the efficacy of vaccinating DCs activated by fusion gene-deleted nontransmissible rSeV (rSeV/dF) using a murine model of lung metastasis. Bolus and i.v. administration of DCs harboring rSeV/dF-expressing GFP without pulsation of tumor Ag (DC-rSeV/dF-GFP) 2 days before tumor inoculation showed efficient prevention against lung metastasis of c1300 neuroblastoma, but not of RM-9 prostatic cancer. We found that the timing of DC therapy was critical for the inhibition of pulmonary metastasis of RM-9, and that the optimal effect of DCs was seen 28 days before tumor inoculation. Interestingly, the antimetastatic effect was sustained for over 3 mo, even when administered DCs were already cleared from the lung and organs related to the immune system. Although NK cell activity had already declined to baseline at the time of tumor inoculation, Ab-mediated depletion studies revealed that CD4+ cells as well as the presence of, but not the activation of, NK cells were crucial to the prevention of lung metastasis. These results are the first demonstration of efficient inhibition of lung metastasis via bolus administration of virally activated DCs that was sustained and NK/CD4+ cell-dependent, and may suggest a potentially new mechanism of DC-based immunotherapy for advanced malignancies.
We previously reported the development of a prototype 'oncolytic Sendai virus (SeV) vector' formed by introducing two major genomic modifications to the original SeV, namely deletion of the matrix (M) gene to avoid budding of secondary viral particles and manipulation of the trypsin-dependent cleavage site of the fusion (F) gene to generate proteasespecific sequences. As a result, the 'oncolytic SeV' that was susceptible to matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) was shown to selectively kill MMP-expressing tumors through syncytium formation in vitro and in vivo. However, its efficacy has been relatively limited because of the requirement of higher expression of MMPs and smaller populations of MMP-expressing tumors. To overcome these limitations, we have designed an optimized and dramatically powerful oncolytic SeV vector. Truncation of 14-amino acid residues of the cytoplasmic domain of F protein resulted in dramatic enhancement of cell-killing activities of oncolytic SeV, and the combination with replacement of the trypsin cleavage site with the new urokinase type plasminogen activator (uPA)-sensitive sequence (SGRS) led a variety of human tumors, including prostate (PC-3), renal (CAKI-I), pancreatic (BxPC3) and lung (PC14) cancers, to extensive death through massive cell-tocell spreading without significant dissemination to the surrounding noncancerous tissue in vivo. These results indicate a dramatic improvement of antitumor activity; therefore, extensive utility of the newly designed uPA-targeted oncolytic SeV has significant potential for treating patients bearing urokinase-expressing cancers in clinical settings.
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