Safety profiles and antitumor efficacy of oncolytic adenovirus coated with bioreducible polymer in the treatment of a CAR negative tumor model

SJ Jung, D Kasala, JW Choi, SH Lee… - …, 2015 - ACS Publications
SJ Jung, D Kasala, JW Choi, SH Lee, JK Hwang, SW Kim, CO Yun
Biomacromolecules, 2015ACS Publications
Adenovirus (Ad) vectors show promise as cancer gene therapy delivery vehicles, but
immunogenic safety concerns and coxsackie and adenovirus receptor (CAR)-dependency
have limited their use. Alternately, biocompatible and bioreducible nonviral vectors,
including arginine-grafted cationic polymers, have been shown to deliver nucleic acids
through a cell penetration peptide (CPP) and protein transduction domain (PTD) effect. We
utilized the advantages of both viral and nonviral vectors to develop a hybrid gene delivery …
Adenovirus (Ad) vectors show promise as cancer gene therapy delivery vehicles, but immunogenic safety concerns and coxsackie and adenovirus receptor (CAR)-dependency have limited their use. Alternately, biocompatible and bioreducible nonviral vectors, including arginine-grafted cationic polymers, have been shown to deliver nucleic acids through a cell penetration peptide (CPP) and protein transduction domain (PTD) effect. We utilized the advantages of both viral and nonviral vectors to develop a hybrid gene delivery vehicle by coating Ad with mPEG-PEI-g-Arg-S-S-Arg-g-PEI-mPEG (Ad/PPSA). Characterization of Ad/PPSA particle size and zeta potential showed an overall size and cationic charge increase in a polymer concentration-dependent manner. Ad/PPSA also showed a marked transduction efficiency increase in both CAR-negative and -positive cells compared to naked Ad. Competition assays demonstrated that Ad/PPSA produced higher transgene expression levels than naked Ad and achieved CAR-independent transduction. Oncolytic Ad (DWP418)/PPSA was able to overcome the nonspecificity of polymer-only therapies by demonstrating cancer-specific killing effects. Furthermore, the DWP418/PPSA nanocomplex elicited a 2.24-fold greater antitumor efficacy than naked Ad in vivo. This was supported by immunohistochemical confirmation of Ad E1As accumulation in MCF7 xenografted tumors. Lastly, intravenous injection of DWP418/PPSA elicited less innate immune response compared to naked Ad, evaluated by interleukin-6 cytokine release into the serum. The increased antitumor effect and improved vector targeting to both CAR-negative and -positive cells make DWP418/PPSA a promising tool for cancer gene therapy.
ACS Publications