Retargeting of viruses to generate oncolytic agents

Publication date

2012

Authors

Verheije, Monique HISNI 0000000394624190
Rottier, Peter J MISNI 0000000029654607

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

Abstract

Oncolytic virus therapy is based on the ability of viruses to effectively infect and kill tumor cells without destroying the normal tissues. While some viruses seem to have a natural preference for tumor cells, most viruses require the modification of their tropism to specifically enter and replicate in such cells. This review aims to describe the transductional targeting strategies currently employed to specifically redirect viruses towards surface receptors on tumor cells. Threemajor strategies can be distinguished; they involve (i) the incorporation of new targeting specificity into a viral surface protein, (ii) the incorporation of a scaffold into a viral surface protein to allow the attachment of targeting moieties, and (iii) the use of bispecific adapters to mediate targeting of a virus to a specified moiety on a tumor cell. Of each strategy key features, advantages and limitations are discussed and examples are given. Because of their potential to cause sustained, multiround infection—a desirable characteristic for eradicating tumors— particular attention is given to viruses engineered to become self-targeted by the genomic expression of a bispecific adapter protein.

Keywords

Citation

Verheije, M H & Rottier, P J M 2012, 'Retargeting of viruses to generate oncolytic agents', Advances in Virology, vol. 2012. https://doi.org/10.1155/2012/798526