| Literature DB >> 21321381 |
Daniel M Wall1, C V Srikanth, Beth A McCormick.
Abstract
When one considers the organism Salmonella enterica serotype Typhimurium (S. Typhimurium), one usually thinks of the Gram-negative enteric pathogen that causes the severe food borne illness, gastroentertitis. In this context, the idea of Salmonella being exploited as a cancer therapeutic seems pretty remote. However, there has been an escalating interest in the development of tumor-therapeutic bacteria for use in the treatment of a variety of cancers. This strategy takes advantage of the remarkable ability of certain bacteria to preferentially replicate and accumulate within tumors. In the case of S. Typhimurium, this organism infects and selectively grows within implanted tumors, achieving tumor/normal tissue ratios of approximately 1,000:1. Salmonella also has some attractive properties well suited for the design of a chemotherapeutic agent. In particular, this pathogen can easily be manipulated to carry foreign genes, and since this species is a facultative anaerobe, it is able to survival in both oxygenated and hypoxic conditions, implying this organism could colonize both small metastatic lesions as well as larger tumors. These observations are the impetus to a burgeoning field focused on the development of Salmonella as a clinically useful anti-cancer agent. We will discuss three cutting edge technologies employing Salmonella to target tumors.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 21321381 PMCID: PMC3157733 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.101208
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1:Schematic representing the advantages offered by Salmonella (SL) as a cancer therapeutic agent
Green box represents how the conventional chemotherapeutic agent (blue pentagon) is unable to penetrate deep into the fast growing tumor. Blue box represents the engineered-Salmonella therapy. Salmonella offers several advantages like (i) tumor-specificity, (ii)self-replicating potential, (iii) ability to be genetically engineered with either (a) gene silencing (red box), or (b) tumor sensitizing (brown box) or (c) bacterial toxin/effectors producing methodologies (purple box), leading to tumor regression by caspase-3 mediated and other mechanisms, (iv) ability to migrate to distal regions of the tumor and (v) most importantly to induce gap-junction in tumors leading to immune activation against the tumor.
Advantages of Salmonella as an anti-tumor agent
| Feature | Underlying Reason | References |
|---|---|---|
| Systemic administration | VNP20009 can be delivered intravenously or by direct injection into a tumor | [ |
| Tumor specificity | Salmonella can accumulate at levels 1,000 fold higher in tumors as opposed to normal tissues reducing the risk of toxic side effects of proteins or compounds delivered systemically. | [ |
| Replication competent | Unlike other therapeutic agents Salmonella replicates at the tumor site so that a low? dose replicates to an effective dose within the target tumor | [ |
| Broad tumor specificity | Salmonella targets a broad range of solid tumors, including melanoma, lung, colon, breast, renal, hepatic, and prostate tumors | [ |
| Delivery capacity | Salmonella is metabolically active and can continuously produce a protein of interest during infection of the tumor | [ |
| Anti-tumor Immune activation | Salmonella infection induces the upregulation of Cx43 protein. This results in the formation of functional Gap?junctions in tumors leading to transfer of tumor antigenic peptides to the DCs and eventually recruiting CD8 T cells | [ |
| Antibiotic sensitivity | Salmonella can be easily removed following treatment with antibiotics Native cytotoxicity Ability of the bacteria to produce virulence factors that leads to cytotoxicity and attract immune cells to the tumors helps in further tumor regression | [ |
| Post delivery detection | Engineered Salmonella expresses fluorescent proteins that offers the ability to be externally detected | [ |