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. 2021 Mar 8;39(3):394-406.e4.
doi: 10.1016/j.ccell.2020.12.022. Epub 2021 Jan 21.

Oncolytic virotherapy-mediated anti-tumor response: a single-cell perspective

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Free article

Oncolytic virotherapy-mediated anti-tumor response: a single-cell perspective

Egle Ramelyte et al. Cancer Cell. .
Free article

Abstract

Talimogene laherparepvec (T-VEC) is a genetically modified herpes simplex 1 virus (HSV-1) approved for cancer therapy. We investigate its effect on the clinical, histological, single-cell transcriptomic, and immune repertoire level using repeated fine-needle aspirates (FNAs) of injected and noninjected lesions in primary cutaneous B cell lymphoma (pCBCL). Thirteen patients received intralesional T-VEC, 11 of which demonstrate tumor response in the injected lesions. Using single-cell sequencing of the FNAs, we identify the malignant population and separate three pCBCL subtypes. Twenty-four hours after the injection, we detect HSV-1T-VEC transcripts in malignant and nonmalignant cells of the injected lesion but not of the noninjected lesion. Oncolytic virotherapy results in a rapid eradication of malignant cells. It also leads to interferon pathway activation and early influx of natural killer cells, monocytes, and dendritic cells. These events are followed by enrichment in cytotoxic T cells and a decrease of regulatory T cells in injected and noninjected lesions.

Keywords: T-VEC-induced innate and adaptive immunity; nonspecific cell infection; oncolytic virotherapy; primary cutaneous B cell lymphoma; single-cell RNA sequencing; single-cell immune repertoire profiling.

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Conflict of interest statement

Declaration of interests The project was sponsored by University of Zurich, Switzerland, partially supported by a research grant provided by Amgen. R.D. has intermittent, project focused consulting and/or advisory relationships with Novartis, Merck Sharp & Dhome, Bristol-Myers Squibb (BMS), Roche, Amgen, Takeda, Pierre Fabre, Sun Pharma, Sanofi, Catalym, Second Genome, Regeneron, and Alligator outside the submitted work. Research in C.B.’s lab was supported by the Swiss National Science Foundation, ETH domain Personalized Health and Related Technologies (PHRT-510). E.G. was supported by the Promedica Stiftung (1406/M and 1412/M), the Swiss Cancer Research Foundation (KFS-4243-08-2017), and the Clinical Research Priority Program of the University of Zurich outside the submitted work. E.R. has intermittent, project focused consulting relationships with Amgen, BMS, and Sanofi outside the submitted work. Other authors have no interests to declare.

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