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Journal of Virology, May 2000, p. 4765-4775, Vol. 74, No. 10
0022-538X/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Complement Depletion Facilitates the Infection of Multiple Brain
Tumors by an Intravascular, Replication-Conditional Herpes Simplex
Virus Mutant
Keiro
Ikeda,1
Hiroaki
Wakimoto,1
Tomotsugu
Ichikawa,1
Sarah
Jhung,2
Fred H.
Hochberg,3
David N.
Louis,1,2 and
E. Antonio
Chiocca1,*
Molecular Neuro-Oncology Laboratories,
Neurosurgery Service,1
Neurology,3 and
Neuropathology,2 Massachusetts
General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Charlestown, Massachusetts
02129
Received 19 August 1999/Accepted 27 January 2000
Intravascular routes of administration can provide a means to
target gene- and virus-based therapies to multiple tumor foci located
within an organ, such as the brain. However, we demonstrate here that
rodent plasma inhibits cell transduction by
replication-conditional (oncolytic) herpes simplex viruses (HSV),
replication-defective HSV, and adenovirus vectors. In vitro depletion
of complement with mild heat treatment or in vivo depletion by
treatment of athymic rats with cobra venom factor (CVF) partially
reverses this effect. Without CVF, inhibition of cell infection by HSV is observed at plasma dilution as high as 1:32, while plasma from CVF-treated animals displays anti-HSV activity at lower dilutions (1:8). When applied to the therapy of intracerebral brain tumors, in vivo complement depletion facilitates the initial infection (assayed
at the 2-day time point) by an intra-arterial
replication-conditional HSV of tumor cells, located within three
separate and distinct human glioma masses. However, at the 4-day time
point, no propagation of HSV from initially infected tumor cells could
be observed. Previously, we have shown that the immunosuppressive
agent, cyclophosphamide (CPA), facilitates the in vivo propagation of
an oncolytic HSV, delivered intravascularly, within infected multiple
intracerebral masses, by inhibition of both innate and elicited
anti-HSV neutralizing antibody response (K. Ikeda et al., Nat. Med.
5:881-889, 1999). In this study, we thus show that the addition of CPA
to the CVF treatment results in a significant increase in
viral propagation within infected tumors, measured at the 4-day time
period. The concerted action of CVF and CPA significantly increases the
life span of athymic rodents harboring three separate and
large glioma xenografts after treatment with intravascular, oncolytic
HSV. Southern analysis of viral genomes analyzed by
PCR reveals the presence of the oncolytic virus in the brains, livers,
spleens, kidneys, and intestine of treated animals, although none of
these tissues displays evidence of HSV-mediated gene expression. In light of clinical trials of oncolytic HSV for malignant brain tumors,
these findings suggest that antitumor efficacy may be limited by the
host innate and elicited humoral responses.
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Molecular
Neuro-Oncology Laboratories, Massachusetts General Hospital-East
Bldg., CNY6, 13th St., Charlestown, MA 02129. Phone: (617) 726-4684. Fax: (617) 726-5079. E-mail:
Chiocca{at}helix.mgh.harvard.edu.
Journal of Virology, May 2000, p. 4765-4775, Vol. 74, No. 10
0022-538X/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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