Establishing a New Platform to Investigate the Efficacy of Oncolytic Virotherapy in a Human Ex Vivo Peritoneal Carcinomatosis Model

Viruses. 2023 Jan 27;15(2):363. doi: 10.3390/v15020363.

Abstract

Oncolytic virotherapy constitutes a promising treatment option for many solid cancers, including peritoneal carcinomatosis (PC), which still represents a terminal stage of many types of tumors. To date, the in vitro efficacy of oncolytic viruses is mostly tested in 2D-cultured tumor cell lines due to the lack of realistic 3D in vitro tumor models. We have investigated the feasibility of virotherapy as a treatment option for PC in a human ex vivo peritoneum co-culture model. Human HT-29 cancer cells stably expressing marker genes GFP and firefly luciferase (GFP/luc) were cultured on human peritoneum and infected with two prototypic oncolytic viruses (GLV-0b347 and MeV-DsRed). Both viral constructs were able to infect HT-29 cells in patient-derived peritoneum with high tumor specificity. Over time, both GFP signal and luciferase activity decreased substantially, thereby indicating successful virus-induced oncolysis. Furthermore, immunohistochemistry stainings showed specific virotherapeutic infections of HT-29 cells and effective tumor cell lysis in infected co-cultures. Thus, the PC model established here provides a clinically relevant screening platform to evaluate the therapeutic efficacy of virotherapeutic compounds and also to investigate, in an autologous setting, the immunostimulatory potential of oncolytic viruses for PC in a unique human model system superior to standard 2D in vitro models.

Keywords: ex vivo peritoneal culture model; oncolytic measles vaccine virus; oncolytic vaccinia virus; peritoneal carcinomatosis; virotherapy.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Cell Death
  • Coculture Techniques
  • Humans
  • Oncolytic Virotherapy*
  • Oncolytic Viruses* / genetics
  • Peritoneal Neoplasms* / therapy

Grants and funding

J.K., D.M., A.M., P.R., and M.-H.D. were supported by Robert-Bosch-Stiftung, Stuttgart, Germany.