Different responses of human pancreatic adenocarcinoma cell lines to oncolytic Newcastle disease virus infection

被引:0
|
作者
P R A Buijs
C H J van Eijck
L J Hofland
R A M Fouchier
B G van den Hoogen
机构
[1] Erasmus MC,Department of Surgery
[2] Erasmus MC,Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Endocrinology
[3] Erasmus MC,Department of Viroscience
来源
Cancer Gene Therapy | 2014年 / 21卷
关键词
pancreatic adenocarcinoma; oncolytic virotherapy; Newcastle disease virus; innate immunity;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Newcastle disease virus (NDV) is a naturally occurring oncolytic virus with clinically proven efficacy against several human tumor types. Selective replication in and killing of tumor cells by NDV is thought to occur because of differences in innate immune responses between normal and tumor cells. In our effort to develop oncolytic virotherapy with NDV for patients with pancreatic cancer, we evaluated the responses to NDV infection and interferon (IFN) treatment of 11 different established human pancreatic adenocarcinoma cell lines (HPACs). Here we show that all HPACs were susceptible to NDV. However, this NDV infection resulted in different replication kinetics and cytotoxic effects. Better replication resulted in more cytotoxicity. No correlation was observed between defects in the IFN pathways and NDV replication or NDV-induced cytotoxicity. IFN production by HPACs after NDV infection differed substantially. Pretreatment of HPACs with IFN resulted in diminished NDV replication and decreased the cytotoxic effects in most HPACs. These findings suggest that not all HPACs have functional defects in the innate immune pathways, possibly resulting in resistance to oncolytic virus treatment. These data support the rationale for designing recombinant oncolytic NDVs with optimized virulence that should likely contain an antagonist of the IFN pathways.
引用
收藏
页码:24 / 30
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Different responses of human pancreatic adenocarcinoma cell lines to oncolytic Newcastle disease virus infection
    Buijs, P. R. A.
    van Eijck, C. H. J.
    Hofland, L. J.
    Fouchier, R. A. M.
    van den Hoogen, B. G.
    CANCER GENE THERAPY, 2014, 21 (01) : 24 - 30
  • [2] Oncolytic Activity of Avian Influenza Virus in Human Pancreatic Ductal Adenocarcinoma Cell Lines
    Kasloff, Samantha B.
    Pizzuto, Matteo S.
    Silic-Benussi, Micol
    Pavone, Silvia
    Ciminale, Vincenzo
    Capua, Ilaria
    JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY, 2014, 88 (16) : 9321 - 9334
  • [3] Newcastle disease virus as an oncolytic agent
    Ravindra, P. V.
    Tiwari, Ashok K.
    Sharma, Bhaskar
    Chauhan, R. S.
    INDIAN JOURNAL OF MEDICAL RESEARCH, 2009, 130 (05) : 507 - 513
  • [4] Comparison between intratumoral and intravenously administered oncolytic virus therapy with Newcastle disease virus in a xenograft murine model for pancreatic adenocarcinoma
    de Graaf, Frederique
    Huberts, Marco
    Groeneveld, Daphne
    van Nieuwkoop, Stefan
    van Eijck, Casper H. J.
    Fouchier, Ron A. M.
    van den Hoogen, Bernadette G.
    HELIYON, 2022, 8 (07)
  • [5] Sensitivity of Human Malignant Melanoma Cell Lines to Newcastle Disease Virus
    Pap, Marianna
    Bator, Judit
    Szeberenyi, Jozsef
    ANTICANCER RESEARCH, 2015, 35 (10) : 5401 - 5406
  • [6] Oncolytic Newcastle disease virus reduces growth of cervical cancer cell by inducing apoptosis
    Keshavarz, Mohsen
    Nejad, Amir Sasan Mozaffari
    Esghaei, Maryam
    Bokharaei-Salim, Farah
    Dianat-Moghadam, Hassan
    Keyvani, Hossein
    Ghaemi, Amir
    SAUDI JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 2020, 27 (01) : 47 - 52
  • [7] Resistant and susceptible chicken lines show distinctive responses to Newcastle disease virus infection in the lung transcriptome
    Melissa S. Deist
    Rodrigo A. Gallardo
    David A. Bunn
    Jack C. M. Dekkers
    Huaijun Zhou
    Susan J. Lamont
    BMC Genomics, 18
  • [8] Plaque formation by a velogenic Newcastle disease virus in human colorectal cancer cell lines
    Chia, S. -L.
    Tan, W. -S.
    Yusoff, K.
    Shafee, N.
    ACTA VIROLOGICA, 2012, 56 (04) : 345 - 347
  • [9] Resistant and susceptible chicken lines show distinctive responses to Newcastle disease virus infection in the lung transcriptome
    Deist, Melissa S.
    Gallardo, Rodrigo A.
    Bunn, David A.
    Dekkers, Jack C. M.
    Zhou, Huaijun
    Lamont, Susan J.
    BMC GENOMICS, 2017, 18
  • [10] Adaptation of the Newcastle Disease Virus to Cell Cultures for Enhancing Its Oncolytic Properties
    Yurchenko, K. S.
    Jing, Yi
    Shestopalov, A. M.
    ACTA NATURAE, 2019, 11 (01): : 66 - 73