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Complementary dual-virus strategy drives synthetic target and cognate T-cell engager expression for endogenous-antigen agnostic immunotherapy.

Zaid TahaMathieu Joseph François CrupiNouf AlluqmaniDuncan MacKenzieSydney VallatiJack Timothy WhelanFaiha FareezAkram AlwithenaniJulia PetrykAndrew ChenMarcus Mathew SpinelliKristy NgJudy SobhChristiano Tanese de SouzaPriya Rose BharadwaTimothy Kit Hin LeeDylan Anthony ThomasBen Zhen HuangOmar KassasJoanna PoutouVictoria Heather GilchristStephen BoultonMax ThomsonRicardo MariusMohsen HooshyarScott McCombRozanne ArulanandamCarolina Solange IlkowJohn Cameron BellJean-Simon Diallo
Published in: Nature communications (2024)
Targeted antineoplastic immunotherapies have achieved remarkable clinical outcomes. However, resistance to these therapies due to target absence or antigen shedding limits their efficacy and excludes tumours from candidacy. To address this limitation, here we engineer an oncolytic rhabdovirus, vesicular stomatitis virus (VSVΔ51), to express a truncated targeted antigen, which allows for HER2-targeting with trastuzumab. The truncated HER2 (HER2T) lacks signaling capabilities and is efficiently expressed on infected cell surfaces. VSVΔ51-mediated HER2T expression simulates HER2-positive status in tumours, enabling effective treatment with the antibody-drug conjugate trastuzumab emtansine in vitro, ex vivo, and in vivo. Additionally, we combine VSVΔ51-HER2T with an oncolytic vaccinia virus expressing a HER2-targeted T-cell engager. This dual-virus therapeutic strategy demonstrates potent curative efficacy in vivo in female mice using CD3+ infiltrate for anti-tumour immunity. Our findings showcase the ability to tailor the tumour microenvironment using oncolytic viruses, thereby enhancing compatibility with "off-the-shelf" targeted therapies.
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