The present invention provides manipulated adenovirus, especially a viral particle based on a manipulated adenovirus, for use as a medicament, especially for use in the treatment of tumours, including e.g. solid and cellular neoplasms. Further, the invention relates to the use of the viral particle in a process for manufacturing a medicament for the treatment of tumours and to a process for the treatment of tumours comprising the step of administering the viral particle. The viral particle of the invention has the advantage of having a preference or specificity for tumour cells, yielding a preferred infection of tumour cells e.g. in comparison to non-tumour cells.
The viral particle has the advantage of replicating within infected cells, thus reproducing the viral particle and allowing re-targeting of the viral particle to tumour cells.
In a further embodiment, the viral particle is devised to express a transgene contained in an expression cassette upon contact with the tumour cell. The transgene can be a therapeutically protein or nucleic acid molecule that is active against tumour cells.
Staba et al., Cancer Gene Therapy 13-19 (2000) describe that an alteration of the fiber-coat protein of a non-replicating adenoviral vector to contain a polylysin modification increased transfection efficiency in tumours in vivo.
Cripe et al., Cancer Research 2953-2960 (2001) describe that in rhabdomyosarcoma cells expressing the integrin internalisation receptor for adenovirus, low infectivity by adenovirus is caused by low expression of the cellular coxsackie-virus-adenovirus receptor (CAR). Modification of the fiber knob molecule of adenovirus that originally specifically binds to CAR by introducing an integrin-binding RGD peptide or a polylysine peptide into the fiber knob increased infection of the cells.
Glasgow et al., Cancer Gene Therapy 830-844 (2006) review targeting of adenovirus by addition of bispecific molecules binding to a cell surface molecule and to the CAR-binding knob of adenovirus. As an alternative, the fiber and knob domains of adenovirus are reported to be replaced by the trimerizing T4 fibritin and a C-terminal 6-His motif for specific binding to a 6-His receptor expressed on a cell, or replaced by trimeric CD40 ligand fused to the C-terminus of T4 fibritin.
Stummeyer et al., Molecular Microbiology 1123-1135 (2006) describe the bacteriophage K1F to encode an endosialidase adjacent the section encoding an N-terminal capsid binding part of gp17 protein, relevant for connection to capsid protein. The bacteriophage K1F is highly specific for infecting the virulent E. coli K1, known to have an α2,8-linked polysialic acid (polySia) capsule. The α2,8-linked polysialic acid is poorly immunogenic due to structural identity to polySia of the neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM).
US 2011/0189234 A1 describes the production of an adenoviral particle lacking a functional fiber knob domain in the presence of the adenovirus E3 protein. For targeting the viral particle, it can be provided with a trimerization domain and a binding molecule, e.g. ligands for receptors, cytokines, TNF, growth factors, adhesion molecules, or carbonic anhydrase, amino acid sequences RGD or NGR known to bind to integrins or CD13.
WO2004/007537 A2 relates to adenoviral particles containing a fiber from which the binding domains for glycosaminoglycan and/or for sialic acid are mutated to reduce or abolish binding of the adenoviral particle to glycosaminoglycan and/or sialic acid as a receptor.
Kühnel et al., J. Virol. 13743-13754 (2004) describe protein transduction domain fusion proteins that enhance cellular virus uptake in anti-tumour treatment.
Kavoosi et al., Biotechnol. Bioeng. 599-610 (2007) describe a method for identifying linker peptides for specific fusion proteins expressed in E. coli.
Krasnykh et al., J. Virology 4176-4183 (2001) describe wild-type adenovirus to have a knob domain linked by a stem-like fiber protein domain to a penton base protein that forms part of the viral particle. The knob domain is at the C-terminus, while the N-terminus of the fiber domain attaches to the penton base protein. In the wild-type, the knob domain is generally seen as mediating cellular infection by binding to the coxsackievirus and adenovirus receptor (CAR), which is present on a large variety of healthy cells. The fiber domain is a trimer of three identical 62 kDa peptides, the trimerisation of which is assumed to be essential for structure and function of the virus. The knob domain initiates and maintains trimerisation of the entire fiber molecule. Modifications of the complex structure of the fiber knob domains may result in destabilisation of the trimer formation and hence in non-functional viral particles. Krasnykh describes a fiber domain from which the wild-type knob domain was deleted and replaced by a 6-His domain having specificity for an artificial cell surface receptor. For compensating the trimerisation activity of the wild-type knob domain towards the fiber domain, the tail and two N-terminal repeats of the wild-type shaft domain of the Ad5 fiber domain were genetically fused to a truncated bacteriophage T4 protein.
The entire fiber protein of adenovirus serotype 5 (Ad5), containing the fiber domain and the knob domain, is known, e.g. from Schagen et al., Hum Gene Ther. 783-794 (2008) to consist of an N-terminal tail domain, linking to the penton base protein, a flexible fiber domain , also designated as shaft, bordering on the C-terminus of the tail domain, and an adjacent C-terminal knob domain, which is responsible for binding to CAR. Schagen et al. describe the cloning of an adenoviral particle bearing the oligomerization domain of reovirus attachment protein al, resulting in an altered host cell specificity.
Mercier et al., Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A, 6188-6193 (2004) describe the cloning of a viral particle on the basis of Ad5 fiber protein that contains the al protein of reovirus type 3 Dearing for mucosa targeting.
Tsuruta et al., Clin Cancer Res. 2777-2783 (2007) and Schagen et al., Human Gene Therapy 783-794 (2008) describe a chimeric Ad5 fiber protein with σ1 protein of reovirus, to the reovirus head domain of which a 6-His tag was added. Further, Tsuruta et al. describe a chimeric Ad5/Ad3 fiber.
It is an object of the invention to provide an alternative viral particle on the basis of adenovirus which preferably infects tumour cells rather than non-neoplastic cells in humans and/or in animals and which particle can replicate within cells in order to allow a continuous activity of the viral particle against tumour cells without addition of an external agent mediating the specificity to tumour cells.
The invention achieves the object by the features of the claims, especially by a viral particle based on adenovirus, especially type C, preferably serotype 2 (Ad2), more preferably serotype 5 (Ad5), in which the native entire fiber protein, and its coding sequence, respectively, is deleted and replaced by a fusion protein, and its coding sequence, respectively. The fusion protein provides specificity for cell surface bound α2,8-linked N-acetylneuraminic acid, herein also termed polysialic acid or polySia, especially linear homopolymers of α2,8-linked N-acetylneuraminic acid. The fusion protein from N-terminus to C-terminus comprises or consists of an adenovirus tail domain, optionally at least one pseudo-repeat, optionally a linker, and an endosialidase of bacteriophage origin. In the viral particle, this fusion protein is encoded by the DNA contained in the viral particle. The viral particle containing this fusion protein therefore lacks the native knob domain of its fiber protein, which is replaced by an endosialidase of bacteriophage origin. For the purposes of the invention, the fusion peptide linked to the penton base protein and comprising the endosialidase is also referred to as polySia-binder.
Accordingly, the viral particle contains a polySia-binder comprising or consisting of, from N-terminus to C-terminus, one tail domain originating from adenoviral fiber protein, optionally at least one pseudo-repeat of a fiber domain, and one endosialidase of bacteriophage origin, with an optional linker peptide between the at least one pseudo-repeat of a fiber domain and the endosialidase, the polySia-binder being coupled to the penton base protein. Accordingly, the endosialidase of bacteriophage origin can be linked directly to the tail domain or to the optional linker peptide present at the C-terminus of the tail domain. Accordingly, the tail domain does not contain the bacteriophage knob domain. The DNA contained in the viral particle encodes the polySia-binder, in which DNA the coding sequence for fiber protein is inactivated, e.g. deleted, the DNA encoding the polySia binder preferably replacing the DNA sequence encoding the fiber protein.
For example, the viral particle is based on adenovirus C serotype 5 (Ad5), having a genomic sequence accessible at GenBank at accession No. AY339865.1, in which the coding sequence of nucleotides 31037 to 32782 encodes the natural fiber protein, which coding sequence according the invention is inactivated, preferably deleted, and in its place a coding sequence for the fusion protein, the polySia binder, is arranged.
Optionally, in the viral particle, the coding sequence for the early protein E3 is inactivated, e.g. deleted. A deletion of the coding sequence for protein E3 can e.g. comprise or consist of a deletion of nucleotides encoding E3, e.g. nucleotides No. 28132 to 30814, encompassing a deletion of approx. 2.7 kbp in the sequence accessible at GenBank at accession No. AY339865.1.
For the viral particle, the bacteriophage endosialidase has been found to selectively bind to polysialic acid present on the cell surface of some mammalian cells and to allow infection by the viral particle of mammalian cells bearing polysialic acid, whereas infection of cells having essentially no surface-bound polysialic acid were not infected to a detectable level. In these analyses cell lines were used that bear the natural receptor CAR for native adenovirus with only one cell line bearing polysialic acid on its surface. The results show that the viral particle of the invention, bearing on its penton base protein the fusion protein containing at its C-terminus an endosialidase of bacteriophage origin that replaces the native knob domain, with preference, preferably with predominance, infects mammalian cells and tissue bearing cell-surface bound polysialic acid in comparison to cells essentially lacking cell-surface bound polysialic acid. Optionally, the endosialidase can be mutated to diminish or inactivate its enzymatic activity, as it has been found that such mutations still allow binding of the polySia-binder to cell surface bound polysialic acid. Generally preferred, the endosialidase of the polySia binder preferably is an endosialidase of bacteriophage origin which at its the N-terminus is truncated to delete its bacteriophage attachment domain, and accordingly, the endosialidase lacking the bacteriophage attachment domain of the polySia binder can also be referred to as an endosialidase domain.
Accordingly, it is preferred that the viral particle is for use in the treatment of tumours, wherein the tumour cells bear cell-surface bound polysialic acid, e.g. the tumour is selected from glioblastoma, medulloblastoma, rhabdomyosarcoma, small cell carcinoma, e.g. small cell lung carcinoma.
In the fusion protein, the tail domain can e.g. be selected from the sequences comprising or consisting of the C-terminal tail domain of adenovirus, e.g. adenovirus serotype 2, preferably adenovirus serotype 5.
In the fusion protein, the optional pseudo-repeats arranged at the N-terminus of the tail domain can comprise or consist of at least one to at least 22 or more pseudo-repeats, e.g. their number can be lower, higher or equal to the number of pseudo-repeats in the natural fiber protein, and preferably is reduced in comparison to the number of pseudo-repeats in the natural fiber protein, e.g. be shortened to contain at least one pseudo-repeat, e.g. to contain one to 22, e.g. to contain 8 to 19 pseudo-repeats.
The invention is described with reference to the following exemplary sequences: SEQ ID NO: 1 (ΔC521-Fiber-PT8P-ΔN247-Endo-K1F) encodes a polySia-binder, in which the N-terminal adenovirus tail domain is the wild-type tail domain, the pseudo-repeat section contains one pseudo-repeat, obtained by truncation of the 521 amino acids from the C-terminus of the wild-type fiber protein, a linker ((PT)8P) at amino acids 45 to 65, and the N-terminally truncated endosialidase from bacteriophage K1F, obtained by N-terminal truncation by 247 amino acids from the wild-type endosialidase.
SEQ ID NO: 2 (ΔC414-Fiber-PT8P-ΔN247-Endo-K1F) encodes a polySia-binder, in which the N-terminal adenovirus tail domain is the wild-type tail domain, the pseudo-repeat section contains 8 pseudo-repeats, obtained by truncation of the 414 amino acids from the C-terminus of the wild-type fiber protein, a linker ((PT)8P), and the N-terminally truncated endosialidase from bacteriophage K1F, obtained by N-terminal truncation by 247 amino acids. SEQ ID NO: 3 (ΔC307-Fiber-PT8P-ΔN247-Endo-K1F) encodes a polySia-binder, in which the N-terminal adenovirus tail domain is the wild-type tail domain, the pseudo-repeat section contains 14 pseudo-repeats, obtained by truncation of the 307 amino acids from the C-terminus of the wild-type fiber protein, a linker ((PT)8P) containing 8 repetitions of amino acids PT, and the N-terminally truncated endosialidase from bacteriophage K1F, obtained by N-terminal truncation by 247 amino acids.
Generally, at least one amino acid, e.g. 1 to 3 amino acids, e.g. proline, glycine and/or serine , can be comprised in the linker in addition to the repetitions at the C-terminus and/or at the N-terminus of the linker. In the exemplary embodiments, ProGly is present at the N-terminus of the repetitions (PT)8P, and a Ser is present at the C-terminus of the repetitions (PT)8P. In general, the polySia binder can contain essentially any linker between the C-terminus of the tail domain or of the pseudo-repeat of the fiber domain and the N-terminus of the endosialidase.
SEQ ID NO: 4 (ΔC235-Fiber-PT8P-ΔN247-Endo-K1F) encodes a polySia-binder, in which the N-terminal adenovirus tail domain is the wild-type tail domain, the pseudo-repeat section contains 14 pseudo-repeats, obtained by truncation of the 235 amino acids from the C-terminus of the wild-type fiber protein, a linker ((PT)8P), and the N-terminally truncated endosialidase from bacteriophage K1F, obtained by N-terminal truncation by 247 amino acids.
The at least one pseudo-repeat can e.g. be selected from the sequences comprising or consisting of amino acids No. 45 to 60 of SEQ ID NO: 1, containing 1 pseudo-repeat, amino acids No. 45 to 168 of SEQ ID NO: 2, containing 8 pseudo-repeats, amino acids No. 45 to 274 of SEQ ID NO: 3, containing 15 pseudo-repeats, and amino acids No. 45 to 348 of SEQ ID NO: 4, containing 19 pseudo-repeats.
The optional linker peptide can e.g. have 10 to 30 amino acids, e.g. 15 to 20 amino acids, e.g. be selected from the sequences comprising or consisting of the (PT)8P linker (8 repeats of Pro-Thr, and a Pro, including N-terminal GlyPro and C-terminal Ser) of amino acids No. 349 to 368 of SEQ ID NO: 4.
The endosialidase of bacteriophage origin is truncated at its N-terminus to delete its natural attachment domain that mediates binding of the endosialidase catalytic portion to the bacteriophage capsid. As a result, the endosialidase domain of the polySia-binder is devoid of this N-terminal attachment domain.
Preferably, the endosialidase is selected from the group comprising or consisting of the endosialidase of bacteriophage K1E, the endosialidase of bacteriophage K1F, endosialidase of bacteriophage NK1 (CUS3), and endosialidase of bacteriophage φ92. The amino acid sequence of endosialidase domain without its respective N-terminal attachment domain of the endosialidase of bacteriophage K1E is given as SEQ ID NO: 5, in which the native N-terminal 40 amino acids are deleted, of the endosialidase of bacteriophage K1F is given as SEQ ID NO: 6, in which the native N-terminal 247 amino acids are deleted, the endosialidase of bacteriophage NK1 (CUS3) is given as SEQ ID NO: 7 in which the native N-terminal 147 amino acids are deleted, and the endosialidase of bacteriophage φ92 is given as SEQ ID NO: 8 in which the native N-terminal 76 amino acids are deleted.
Preferably, the polySia-binder from N-terminus to C-terminus comprises or consists of
The mutant sequences have a reduced or completely abolished enzymatic activity and have similar to identical binding properties in comparison to the non-mutant sequences. For example, EndoK1F-K410A has an enzymatic activity of approx. 20% of the wild-type but essentially the same affinity and specificity for polysialic acid, EndoK1F R596A/R647A has no detectable enzymatic activity while maintaining essentially the same affinity and specificity for polysialic acid. Accordingly, for the purposes of the invention, the endosialidase of the fusion protein can optionally have a reduced enzymatic activity on polysialic acid or be devoid of enzymatic activity on polysialic acid, preferably having the affinity and specificity for polysialic acid as a non-mutant wild-type endosialidase of bacteriophage origin. The enzymatic activity on polysialic acid can be reduced, e.g. to a degree that the endosialidase is devoid of enzymatic activity on polysialic acid, due to a mutation, e.g. a mutation of a catalytically active amino acid, e.g. a mutation resulting in the replacement of a catalytically active amino acid by another amino acid.
In SEQ ID NO: 5 (EndoK1E), SEQ ID NO: 6 (EndoK1F), SEQ ID NO: 7 (EndoNK1), and SEQ ID NO: 8 (Endoφ92) the N-terminal bacteriophage attachment domain is removed, which e.g. in EndoK1F comprised amino acids 1 to 246 of the wild-type bacteriophage protein.
Exemplary fusion proteins have an amino acid sequence of at least 90%, preferably at least 95%, more preferred at least 98% identity to one of SEQ ID NO: 1, SEQ ID NO: 2, SEQ ID NO: 3 or SEQ ID NO: 4. The sequence alignment of
Preferably, the nucleic acid sequence encoding the viral particle, especially the nucleic acid sequence encoding the polySia binder, have the codon usage of the tumour cell, preferably the human codon usage for the viral particle for use as a medicament in a human patient.
The nucleic acid sequence encoding the viral particle of the invention comprises the nucleic acid sequence, e.g. DNA, which encodes the polySia binder. Accordingly, the viral particle in its DNA contains the sequence which encodes the polySia binder.
For example, the sequence encoding the polySia binder from 5′ to 3′ comprises or consists of the coding sequence for the polySia binder fusion protein, e.g.
The coding sequence for proteins that determine the onset of viral replication in the target cell (E1A) can be contained in the DNA of the viral particle in functional arrangement under the control of a polsialyltransferase promoter, e.g. of mammalian origin, preferably of human origin, or promoters involved in control of cell cycle progression or immortalization, preferably under the control of a telomerase promoter. An exemplary telomerase promoter, which is contained at nucleotides No. 343 to 597 at accession number AY339865.1 at GenBank is given as SEQ ID NO: 27, exemplary polysialyltransferase promoters as SEQ ID NO: 28 (ST8SiaII-promoter region) and SEQ ID NO: 29 (ST8SiaIV promoter region). The arrangement of essential replication proteins such as E1A under control of the aforementioned promoters has the advantage that the onset of viral replication is only permitted in tumour cells (e.g. if a telomerase promoter is used), or, preferably in tumour cells that express essential enzymes required for production of polysialic acid (e.g. if a polysialyltransferase promoter is used). This embodiment is preferred as it preferably allows that viral entry mechanism and virus replication are synchronized to the same molecular target.
The linker peptide is arranged N-terminally to the endosialidase, e.g. adjacent the C-terminus of the tail domain or of the at least one pseudo-repeat, and adjacent the N-terminus of the endosialidase.
Optionally, the viral particle contains an expression cassette for a transgene under the control of a promoter, which promoter is a telomerase promoter, e.g. having a sequence given as SEQ ID NO: 27, or which promoter is an endosialidase promoter, e.g. selected from SEQ ID NO: 28 (ST8SiaII) and SEQ ID NO: 29 (ST8SiaIV). The arrangement of a transgene under functional control of a telomerase promoter or of an endosialidase promoter has the advantage of expression of the transgene when the expression cassette is located within a tumour cell.
The invention will now be described in greater detail by way of examples with reference to the figures, which show in
The designations of these exemplary embodiments indicate the deletions that were made, counting from the C-terminus of the wild-type fiber protein. Optionally all embodiments (ΔC235, ΔC307, ΔC414 and ΔC521) contained the mutation K410A which resulted in a reduced endosialidase activity and did essentially not affect binding to cell surface bound polysialic acid. All of the aforementioned embodiments can optionally contain the double mutation R596A/R647A, abolishing the endosialidase activity but not affecting the binding to polysialic acid. Generally, a deletion can be indicated by a Δ, D, d, or delta, with the letter N indicating a deletion from the N-terminus, the letter C indicating a deletion from the C-terminus.
The N-terminal section of 247 amino acids of the wild-type form is not contained in the polySia-binder in order to delete the wild-type bacteriophage attachment domain.
In the examples, in all viral genomes of the invention and in the wild-type adenovirus used, the coding sequence for E3 protein was deleted.
Exemplary DNA sequences in the form of a bacterial plasmid for cloning a viral particle containing the polySia-binder of the invention are shown in SEQ ID NO: 45, SEQ ID NO: 49 and SEQ ID NO: 51. Therein, the endosialidase is represented by EndoK1F (endoNF), and the expression cassette is under the control of the endosialidase promoter (SEQ ID NO: 45 and 49) or a telomerase promoter (SEQ ID NO: 51), respectively. In SEQ ID NO: 45, nucleotides 28582 to 32136 encode the polySia binder, SEQ ID NO: 48 shows the amino acid sequence of the polySia binder. The N-terminally truncated E3 14.7K encoded by SEQ ID NO: 45 is given as SEQ ID NO: 47, SEQ ID NO: 46 shows the amino acid sequence of the C-terminally truncated E3 14.5K encoded by SEQ ID NO: 45. In SEQ ID NO: 49, nucleotides 29611 to 33165 encode the polySia binder, its amino acid sequence is given as SEQ ID NO: 50. In SEQ ID NO: 51, nucleotides 28447 to 32001 encode the polySia binder, its amino acid sequence is given as SEQ ID NO: 52.
Exemplary complete virus genomes containing a coding sequence for the polySia binder of the invention are given as hTert-Ad-ΔC235fiber-(PT8)P-ΔN247EndoNF-K410A (SEQ ID NO: 53), wherein nucleotides 28447 to 32001 encode the polySia binder, its amino acid sequence is given as SEQ ID NO: 57. SEQ ID NO: 54 to SEQ ID NO: 56 and SEQ ID NO: 58 give the further amino acid sequences of the codons indicated in SEQ ID NO: 53. A complete virus genome containing a coding sequence for the polySia binder termed hTert-Ad-ΔC307fiber-(PT8)P-ΔN247EndoNF-K410A is shown at SEQ ID NO: 59 (hTERT-Ad5_fiberEndo), encoding the polySia binder at nucleotides 28447 to 31782 (Fiber-Endo), the amino acid sequence of which is given as SEQ ID NO: 63. SEQ ID NO: 60 to 62 give the amino acid sequences of the codons indicated in SEQ ID NO: 59 A complete virus genome termed hTert-Ad-ΔC414fiber-(PT8)P-ΔN247EndoNF-K410A is given at SEQ ID NO: 64, encoding the polySia binder at nucleotides 28447 to 31464 (ΔC414fiber-(PT8)P-ΔN247EndoNF-K410A), the amino acid sequence is given at SEQ ID NO: 68. SEQ ID NO: 65 to 67 give further amino acid sequences of the codons indicated in SEQ ID NO: 64. These viral genomes contain DNA sections which form homologous arms for integration of the virus genome into the genome of the target cell by homologous recombination and encode the endosialidase of EndoNF as an embodiment of the endosialidase of phage origin without its phage attachment domain.
Generally, the DNA encoding the adenoviral particles are available by replacing the coding sequence for the fiber protein from the genome encoding a wild-type adenovirus by a sequence encoding the polySia-binder.
The coding sequence for the fusion protein was produced by PCR amplification of sections with primers having overlapping terminal sections, followed by a one-step fusion PCR (Szewczyk et al., Nature Protocols 2006, 3111-3120 and Erratum). The outermost primers of the fusion product contained homologous sections, and the fusion product was integrated into the previously prepared vector lacking the wild-type fiber encoding sequence using the Red/ET mediated recombination (available from Genebridges, USA). The primers used are indicated in
The kanamycin resistance cassette was removed using its FRT sites by FLP/FRT recombination.
The plasmid containing the entire genome for the recombinant adenovirus having the polySia-linker in the place of the wild-type fiber protein was linearized by PacI and transfected into HEK293 cells for producing the adenovirus having the polySia binder, which construct is also referred to as Ad-polySia-binder herein. Ad-polySia-binder adenoviral particles were shown to contain the DNA encoding the genome having the polySia binder, both for the genome encoding all adenoviral proteins except the wild-type fiber protein, and for the embodiment, in which genome in addition the coding sequence for E3 was deleted.
In addition, the coding sequence contained an expression cassette for enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) as a reporter, the coding sequence of which was functionally arranged under the control of the E1B promoter. The CDS (codons) of EGFP was linked to the CDS of E1B via an IRES motif.
For producing Ad-polySia binder viral particles, HEK293-polySia+cells were cultivated in 60 T-75 culture flasks under cell culture conditions in Gibco® DMEMGlutaMAX, containing 2% v/v FCS, Penicillin (100 U/mL) and Streptomycin (100 μg/mL). Cells were grown to about 90% confluency and then infected with the ΔC307 construct with an MOI of 5. The infected cells were incubated until a strong cytopathic effect was observable and nearly all cells were detached. Cells were then collected by centrifugation and lysed by three repetitions of freezing and thawing. Subsequently, particles were concentrated by CsCl gradient centrifugation (96,000×g, 4 h), yielding 5,94×1010 ifu (infectious particles)/mL in a total volume of 2 mL. The proportion of infectious particles in total particles was 1.25%.
These Ad-polySia binder viral particles were used to infect cell line cultures of HEK293 cells and of HEK293 cells that were genetically manipulated to express cell-surface bound polysialic acid (HEK293-polySia+) which in the example represented tumour cells bearing polysialic acid on their cell surface. HEK293-polySia+ were generated by retroviral transduction of HEK293 cells with a DNA encoding for the murine ST8SiaIVunder the control of the CMV promoter.
The results are depicted in
The predominant infection of polysialic acid bearing cells and the very small infection of cells having CAR but no polysialic acid is shown for different amounts of viral particle containing preparations used. This result is shown in
When using wild-type adenovirus as a positive control, both HEK293 cells and HEK293-polySia+ cells, production of virus was found approximately to the same extent for each cell line, indicating no preference for one of the cell lines, i.e. no preference for the polysialic acid bearing cells.
In contrast, HEK293-polySia+ cells when contacted with the viral particles ΔC307 containing the K410A mutation were effectively infected. Fluorescence images of
The results of
The predominance of infection of cells for those cells bearing cell surface bound polysialic acid, represented by HEK293-polySia+, over cells not bearing cell surface bound polysialic acid by viral particles that were produced in infected cells shows that the specificity of the viral particles for cells bearing cell surface bound polysialic acid is stable, i.e. inheritable, and allows for secondary infection of such cells by viral particles that are generated within cells that were primarily infected by viral particles.
Therefore, these results indicate that cells bearing cell surface bound polysialic acid can specifically be infected by the viral particles of the invention, e.g. essentially without infecting cells bearing CAR but no cell surface bound polysialic acid. The viral particles used for initial infection can also be termed primary viral particles. Further, the results show that the viral particles multiply within infected cells to generate secondary viral particles having the same specificity for infecting cells bearing cell surface bound polysialic acid. The stable inheritance of the specificity in secondary viral particles for cells bearing cell surface bound polysialic acid allows re-targeting of the secondary viral particles to cells bearing cell surface bound polysialic acid.
For fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) analysis, HEK293 cells and HEK293-polySia+ cells after contacting with viral particles as described above were incubated in fresh culture medium for 48 h under cell culture conditions and brought into suspension by the treatment with Cell Dissociation Buffer, enzyme-free, PBS (available from Gibco®, USA) according to the manufacturer's guidelines. For detection of infected cells EGFP fluorescence was measured directly. For comparison, wild-type adenovirus containing the same EGFP cassette was used, and ΔC307 and ΔC414, both additionally bearing the K410A mutation. HEK293 cells were used for representing cells having the CAR receptor and essentially having no cell surface bound polysialic acid, and HEK293-polySia+ cells were used for representing tumour cells bearing cell surface bound polysialic acid.
The FACS results are shown in
For establishment of a mouse model of polySia-expressing human xenograft tumours, 1×107 human rhabdomyosarcoma cells (TE671) were injected s.c. into the flank of nude mice. Once the tumours had reached a palpable size of ±100 mm3, virotherapy was applied by intratumoural infiltration of 5×108 ifu of the polySia-specific 307-Ad, or hTert-Ad as control, respectively.
Treatment was repeated after 10 days and tumour size was monitored each 3-4 days using a digital caliper. Size was calculated using the formula V=(L×B2)/2. The results are depicted in
This in vivo example shows that the polySia-binder of the invention when expressed on an adenoviral particle results in retardation of tumour growth of polysialic acid bearing tumour cells.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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15161545.7 | Mar 2015 | EP | regional |
15165130.4 | Apr 2015 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2016/056627 | 3/24/2016 | WO | 00 |