How reovirus kills cancer cells

By ANI
Monday, February 21, 2011

WASHINGTON - A new study has found a virus that can help treat cancer.

Reoviruses are successfully being used in clinical trials to treat patients with cancer.

Not only does the virus cause cancer cells to die, it also forces them to release pro-inflammatory chemokines and cytokines, which in turn causes the patient’s immune system to attack the disease.

The study shows that reovirus infected cancer cells secrete proteins which, even when isolated, result in the death of cancer cells.

Normal human cells are protected from reovirus infection by a protein called PKR. However a cellular signalling protein (Ras), which can block PKR activity, is abnormally activated in many types of cancer and provides a window of opportunity for reovirus infection.

A multi-centre study, involving labs in the UK and America, collected growth media from reovirus infected melanoma cells.

The researchers showed that this media contained a range of small pro-inflammatory proteins, including an interleukin (IL-8) and Type 1 Interferon (INF-B), which recruited and activated white blood cells, specifically Natural Killer (NK) cells, dendritic cells (DC) and anti melanoma cytotoxic T cells (CTL).

Whilst the exact details behind this mode of action of cell signalling in response to viral infection are unclear, the release of cytokines was dependent on both ‘inactive’ PKR and a specific nuclear factor (NF-B).

“Bystander immune-mediated therapy may well be an important component in the treatment of cancer by reoviruses, and may have potential in treating cancer even in the absence of live virus,” said Prof Alan Melcher, from Leeds Institute of Molecular Medicine.

The research was published by BioMed Central’s open access journal Molecular Cancer. (ANI)

Filed under: Science and Technology

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