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Review
. 2022 Dec 9;23(24):15622.
doi: 10.3390/ijms232415622.

Therapeutic Applications for Oncolytic Self-Replicating RNA Viruses

Affiliations
Review

Therapeutic Applications for Oncolytic Self-Replicating RNA Viruses

Kenneth Lundstrom. Int J Mol Sci. .

Abstract

Self-replicating RNA viruses have become attractive delivery vehicles for therapeutic applications. They are easy to handle, can be rapidly produced in large quantities, and can be delivered as recombinant viral particles, naked or nanoparticle-encapsulated RNA, or plasmid DNA-based vectors. The self-replication of RNA in infected host cells provides the means for generating much higher transgene expression levels and the possibility to apply substantially reduced amounts of RNA to achieve similar expression levels or immune responses compared to conventional synthetic mRNA. Alphaviruses and flaviviruses, possessing a single-stranded RNA genome of positive polarity, as well as measles viruses and rhabdoviruses with a negative-stranded RNA genome, have frequently been utilized for therapeutic applications. Both naturally and engineered oncolytic self-replicating RNA viruses providing specific replication in tumor cells have been evaluated for cancer therapy. Therapeutic efficacy has been demonstrated in animal models. Furthermore, the safe application of oncolytic viruses has been confirmed in clinical trials. Multiple myeloma patients treated with an oncolytic measles virus (MV-NIS) resulted in increased T-cell responses against the measles virus and several tumor-associated antigen responses and complete remission in one patient. Furthermore, MV-CEA administration to patients with ovarian cancer resulted in a stable disease and more than doubled the median overall survival.

Keywords: DNA replicons; RNA replicons; cancer immunotherapy; cancer vaccines; clinical trials; oncolytic viruses; preclinical studies; recombinant viral particles.

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Conflict of interest statement

The author declares no conflict of interest.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Schematic illustration of the delivery of self-replicating RNA viruses. Viral particles, naked RNA replicons, lipid nanoparticle (LNP)-encapsulated RNA, or DNA replicons can be used.

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