| Literature DB >> 28382885 |
Barnabas James Walker1, Guy-Bart V Stan2, Karen Marie Polizzi1.
Abstract
Biologics are a promising new class of drugs based on complex macromolecules such as proteins and nucleic acids. However, delivery of these macromolecules into the cytoplasm of target cells remains a significant challenge. Here we present one potential solution: bacterial nanomachines that have evolved over millions of years to efficiently deliver proteins and nucleic acids across cell membranes and between cells. In this review, we provide a brief overview of the different bacterial systems capable of direct delivery into the eukaryotic cytoplasm and the medical applications for which they are being investigated, along with a perspective on the future directions of this exciting field.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28382885 PMCID: PMC5479498 DOI: 10.1017/erm.2017.7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Expert Rev Mol Med ISSN: 1462-3994 Impact factor: 5.600
Figure 1.Overview of cytoplasmic delivery via bacterial secretion systems. Simplified schematics of the proposed mechanisms for type III, IV and VI secretion systems. Note: for the type IV only one of two suggested mechanisms is shown.
Figure 2.Stimulation of CD8 antigen-presenting pathway via bacterial secretion systems.
Summary of pre-clinical studies utilising the type III secretion system for vaccination/immunotherapy applications.
| Carrier | Signal | Target | Antigen | Organism | Delivery | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SptP (SPI1) | LCMV | Nucleoprotein epitope | Mice | Oral | Protection from lethal challenge (Ref. | |
| Long lasting protective memory (Ref. | ||||||
| YopE (SPI1) | Listeria | LLO or p60 | Mice | Oral | Protection from lethal challenge (Ref. | |
| YopE (SPI1) | Listeria | LLO and p60 | Mice | Oral | Protection from lethal challenge (Ref. | |
| SspH2 (SPI2) | Listeria | LLO or p60 | Mice | Oral | In vivo CD4+ and CD8+ T Cell priming (Ref. | |
| SseF (SPI2) | Listeria | LLO | Mice | Oral | Highly reduced | |
| SopE (SPI1) | SIV | Gag | Rhesus Macaque | Oral | T-cell responses. No improvement in virus control (Ref. | |
| SopE (SPI1) | Sarcoma | NY-ESO-1 (self) | Mice | Oral | Tumour regression (Ref. | |
| Intratumoral | ||||||
| YopE (SPI1) | Fibrosarcoma | p60 | Mice | Oral | Protection from tumour challenge (80% tumour free) (Ref. | |
| SspH2 (SPI2) | Melanoma | HBx | Mice | Oral | Slowed tumour growth (Ref. | |
| YopE (SPI1) | Fibrosarcoma | p60 | Mice | Oral | 50–52% complete tumour regression (Ref. | |
| Intravenous | 71–80% complete tumour regression (Ref. | |||||
| SseF (SPI2) | Colon carcinoma, glioblastoma | Survivin (self) | Mice | Oral | Slowed tumour growth (prophylactic and therapeutic) (Ref. | |
| SopE (SPI1) | Melanoma | TRP2 (self) | Mice | Oral | Prophylactic protection (6/8), tumour eradication (5/8) (Ref. | |
| SseF (SPI2) | Melanoma | Survivin (self) | Mice | Oral | slowed tumour growth (Ref. | |
| YopE (SPI1) | Melanoma | VEGF (self) | Mice | Oral | Prophylactic-reduced angiogenesis and tumour growth (Ref. | |
| SseJ (SPI2) | Lymphoma | Survivin (self) | Mice | Oral | Curative, long-lasting protective memory (Ref. | |
| YopE | Measles | Nucleoprotein capsid epitope | Mice | Oral | Protection (8/10) (Ref. | |
| YopE | Surface Lectin | Gerbils | Oral | Protection (7/10) or reduced load (Ref. | ||
| YopE | Listeria | LLO | Mice | Oral | Simultaneous CD4+ and CD8+ T Cell priming. Reduction in bacterial colonisation of spleen (Ref. | |
| ExoS | Melanoma | Ovalbumin | Mice | Subcutaneous injection | Prophylactic (7/8), curative (5/6) (Ref. | |
| Prophylactic (5/6) (Ref. | ||||||
| ExoS | Melanoma | TRP2, Gp100 | Mice | Subcutaneous injection | Slowed tumour-related death (Ref. | |
| ExoS | Glioblastoma | TRP2 and GP100 | Mice | Subcutaneous injection | Slowed tumour-related death (Ref. |
Figure 3.Applications of functional component delivery via bacterial secretion systems. (a) Illustration of cellular reprogramming via delivery of transcription factors by the T3SS. (b) Illustration of intracellular antibody delivery via the T3SS.