Erythrocyte-leveraged oncolytic virotherapy (ELeOVt): oncolytic virus assembly on erythrocyte surface to combat pulmonary metastasis and alleviate side effects
Publication Date
2023
Advisor
Institution Author
Ergönül, Önder
Can, Füsun
Co-Authors
Liu, Mingyang
Zhang, Ruizhe
Huang, Hanwei
Liu, Pengfei
Zhao, Xu
Wu, Hu
He, Ying
Xu, Ruizhe
Qin, Xifeng
Cheng, Zhenguo
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher:
Wiley
Type
Journal Article
Abstract
Despite being a new promising tool for cancer therapy, intravenous delivery of oncolytic viruses (OVs) is greatly limited by poor tumor targeting, rapid clearance in the blood, severe organ toxicity, and cytokine release syndrome. Herein, a simple and efficient strategy of erythrocyte-leveraged oncolytic virotherapy (ELeOVt) is reported, which for the first time assembled OVs on the surface of erythrocytes with up to near 100% efficiency and allowed targeted delivery of OVs to the lung after intravenous injection to achieve excellent treatment of pulmonary metastases while greatly improving the biocompatibility of OVs as a drug. Polyethyleneimine (PEI) as a bridge to assemble OVs on erythrocytes also played an important role in promoting the transfection of OVs. It is found that ELeOVt approach significantly prolonged the circulation time of OVs and increased the OVs distribution in the lung by more than tenfold, thereby significantly improving the treatment of lung metastases while reducing organ and systemic toxicity. Taken together, these findings suggest that the ELeOVt provides a biocompatible, efficient, and widely available approach to empower OVs to combat lung metastasis. Herein, a simple and efficient strategy of erythrocyte-leveraged oncolytic virotherapy (ELeOVt) is reported, which for the first time assembled OVs on the surface of erythrocytes with up to near 100% efficiency and allowed targeted delivery of OVs to the lung after intravenous injection to achieve excellent treatment of pulmonary metastases while greatly improving the biocompatibility of OVs as a drug.image
Description
Subject
Chemistry, multidisciplinary, Nanoscience and nanotechnology, Materials science, multidisciplinary