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A vector-encoded bispecific killer engager to harness virus-activated NK cells as anti-tumor effectors.

Alessia FloerchingerJessica E KleinMaximiliane S C FinkbeinerTheresa E SchäferGwendolin FuchsJohannes DoernerHubert ZirngiblMaximilian AckermannHans M KvasnickaKerry A ChesterDirk JägerClaudia R BallGuy UngerechtsChristine E Engeland
Published in: Cell death & disease (2023)
Treatment with oncolytic measles vaccines (MV) elicits activation of immune cells, including natural killer (NK) cells. However, we found that MV-activated NK cells show only modest direct cytotoxic activity against tumor cells. To specifically direct NK cells towards tumor cells, we developed oncolytic measles vaccines encoding bispecific killer engagers (MV-BiKE) targeting CD16A on NK cells and carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) as a model tumor antigen. MV-BiKE are only slightly attenuated compared to parental MV and mediate secretion of functional BiKE from infected tumor cells. We tested MV-BiKE activity in cocultures of colorectal or pancreatic cancer cells with primary human NK cells. MV-BiKE mediate expression of effector cytokines, degranulation and specific anti-tumor cytotoxicity by NK cells. Experiments with patient-derived pancreatic cancer cultures indicate that efficacy of MV-BiKE may vary between individual tumors with differential virus permissiveness. Remarkably, we confirmed MV-BiKE activity in primaryhuman colorectal carcinoma specimens with autochthonous tumor and NK cells.This study provides proof-of-concept for MV-BiKE as a novel immunovirotherapy to harness virus-activated NK cells as anti-tumor effectors.
Keyphrases
  • nk cells
  • endothelial cells
  • poor prognosis
  • drug delivery
  • regulatory t cells
  • cancer therapy
  • replacement therapy