The viral tropism of two distinct oncolytic viruses, reovirus and myxoma virus, is modulated by cellular tumor suppressor gene status

M Kim, CT Williamson, J Prudhomme, DG Bebb… - Oncogene, 2010 - nature.com
M Kim, CT Williamson, J Prudhomme, DG Bebb, K Riabowol, PWK Lee, SP Lees-Miller
Oncogene, 2010nature.com
Replication-competent oncolytic viruses hold great potential for the clinical treatment of
many cancers. Importantly, many oncolytic virus candidates, such as reovirus and myxoma
virus, preferentially infect cancer cells bearing abnormal cellular signaling pathways.
Reovirus and myxoma virus are highly responsive to activated Ras and Akt signaling
pathways, respectively, for their specificity for viral oncolysis. However, considering the
complexity of cancer cell populations, it is possible that other tumor-specific signaling …
Abstract
Replication-competent oncolytic viruses hold great potential for the clinical treatment of many cancers. Importantly, many oncolytic virus candidates, such as reovirus and myxoma virus, preferentially infect cancer cells bearing abnormal cellular signaling pathways. Reovirus and myxoma virus are highly responsive to activated Ras and Akt signaling pathways, respectively, for their specificity for viral oncolysis. However, considering the complexity of cancer cell populations, it is possible that other tumor-specific signaling pathways may also contribute to viral discrimination between normal versus cancer cells. Because carcinogenesis is a multistep process involving the accumulation of both oncogene activations and the inactivation of tumor suppressor genes, we speculated that not only oncogenes but also tumor suppressor genes may have an important role in determining the tropism of these viruses for cancer cells. It has been previously shown that many cellular tumor suppressor genes, such as p53, ATM and Rb, are important for maintaining genomic stability; dysfunction of these tumor suppressors may disrupt intact cellular antiviral activity due to the accumulation of genomic instability or due to interference with apoptotic signaling. Therefore, we speculated that cells with dysfunctional tumor suppressors may display enhanced susceptibility to challenge with these oncolytic viruses, as previously seen with adenovirus. We report here that both reovirus and myxoma virus preferentially infect cancer cells bearing dysfunctional or deleted p53, ATM and Rb tumor suppressor genes compared to cells retaining normal counterparts of these genes. Thus, oncolysis by these viruses may be influenced by both oncogenic activation and tumor suppressor status.
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