| Literature DB >> 30302344 |
Marco Antonio Hernández-Luna1, Rosendo Luria-Pérez2.
Abstract
In recent years, cancer immunotherapy has undergone great advances because of our understanding of the immune response and the mechanisms through which tumor cells evade it. A century after the first immunotherapy attempt based on bacterial products described by William Coley, the use of live attenuated bacterial vectors has become a promising alternative in the fight against cancer. This review describes the role of live attenuated Salmonella enterica as an oncolytic and immunotherapeutic agent, due to its high affinity for tumor tissue and its ability to activate innate and adaptive antitumor immune response. Furthermore, its potential use as delivery system of tumor antigens and immunomodulatory molecules that induce tumor regression is also reviewed.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30302344 PMCID: PMC6158935 DOI: 10.1155/2018/2984247
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol Res ISSN: 2314-7156 Impact factor: 4.818
Antitumoral intrinsic activity of Salmonella enterica.
| Specie | Strain | Mutation | Tumor-bearing mice | Administration | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| S14028 |
| Melanoma | Intraperitoneally | [ |
|
| SL7207 |
| Colon cancer | Intravenously, intraperitoneally | [ |
|
| SL3235 |
| Plasmocytoma | Intraperitoneally | [ |
|
| VNP20009 |
| Melanoma | Orally, intraperitoneally | [ |
|
| Wild-type LT2 | Δ | Prostate cancer | Intraperitoneally | [ |
|
| 14028 auxotrophy A1 and A1-R |
| Prostate cancer | Intratumorally, intravenously | [ |
| Breast cancer | Intravenously | [ | |||
| Breast cancer bone metastasis | Intravenously | [ | |||
| Bone tumor and lung metastasis of osteosarcoma | Intravenously | [ | |||
| Pancreatic cancer | Intraperitoneally, Intratumorally | [ | |||
| Spinal cord glioma | Intravenously | [ | |||
|
| LVR01 |
| B-cell lymphoma | Intratumorally | [ |
|
| CVD915 |
| T-cell lymphoma | Intratumorally, subcutaneously | [ |
|
| |||||
|
| |||||
|
| A1-R |
| Osteosarcoma metastasis | Intravenously | [ |
| Osteosarcoma | Intra-arterial | [ | |||
| Intratumorally | [ | ||||
| Melanoma | Orally | [ | |||
| Intravenously | [ | ||||
| Follicular dendritic cell sarcoma | Intraperitoneally | [ | |||
| Soft tissue sarcoma | Intratumorally | [ | |||
| Intravenously | [ | ||||
|
| |||||
|
| |||||
|
| VNP20009 |
| Metastasic melanoma | Intravenously | [ |
Figure 1Oncolytic activity of Salmonella enterica. Once Salmonella reaches the tumor microenvironment, it promotes tumor cell elimination through several mechanisms: (A) inhibits tumor angiogenesis mediated by suppressing HIF-1α transcription factor of VEGF; (B) decreases AKT and mTOR phosphorylation, avoiding possible activation of HIF-1α, thus increases Beclin and LC3, two proteins required for autophagy; (C) degradation of nitrites and nitrates by the enzyme nitrite reductase (NirB) of Salmonella enterica, generates nitric oxide (NO) an apoptotic agent.
Figure 2Activation of innate and adaptive immune response in the tumor microenviroment by Salmonella enterica. Once Salmonella colonizes tumor tissue, it induces an antitumor innate and adaptive immune response through several mechanisms: (a) promotes proinflammatory cytokines (IFN-γ and TNF-α), while decreases both anti-inflammatory (TGF-β, IL-4) and angiogenic factors (VEGF) associated with tumor growth progression; (b) interactions between bacterial components (LPS and flagellin) and tumor cell receptors as TLR4 or TLR5, respectively, induce cytokine secretions that promotes the recruitment of neutrophils, macrophages, T lymphocytes, B lymphocytes, and dendritic cells to the tumor microenvironment; (c) Salmonella colonization induces the expression of connexin 43; this molecule plays a major role in the cross-presentation of tumor antigens by DCs to CD8+ T-cells; (d) the presence of antitumor CD4+ T-cell induce the activation and differentiation of B lymphocytes into plasma cells, producing specific antitumor antibodies.
Salmonella enterica as delivery system of TAA/TSA and immunomodulatory molecules.
| Species | Mutations | Heterologous molecule | Tumor-bearing mice | Antitumoral response | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||
|
|
| Antigen PSA | Prostate cancer | Cytotoxic CD8+ T-cell | [ |
|
| L1HPV16 | Cervical cancer | IFN- | [ | |
|
| Antigen p60217–225 | Fibrosarcoma | Effector and memory CD8+ T-cells | [ | |
| VEGFR-2 | Melanoma | Specific CD8 T-cell | [ | ||
|
| C-Raf | Lung adenoma | Humoral and T-cell responses | [ | |
|
| SipB160-HPV16E7 | Cervical cancer | Humoral response | [ | |
|
|
| NY-ESO-1 | Sarcoma | NY-ESO-1-specific CD8+ T-cell response | [ |
|
|
| MTDH/AEG1-1 | Breast cancer and metastasis | CD8+ T-cell response | [ |
|
| |||||
|
| |||||
|
|
| CCL21 | Colon and breast cancer | CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell response | [ |
| LIGHT | Colon and breast cancer | Infiltration of inflammatory cells | [ | ||
| IL-18 | Colon and breast cancer | CD4+ T-cell response and NK cells | [ | ||
| FasL | Colon and breast cancer | Accumulation of neutrophils | [ | ||
|
|
| IL-2 | Osteosarcoma and metastasis | NK cells | [ |
|
|
| IL-4 and IL-18 | Melanoma | Increase levels of IFN- | [ |
|
| TRAIL | Gastric cancer | Increase levels of caspases 3 and 9 | [ | |
|
| TNF | Melanoma | NK cells | [ | |
|
| |||||
|
| |||||
|
|
| VEGFR-2 | Pancreatic cancer | T-cell response | [ |
CCL21: chemokine (C-C motif) ligand 21; C-Raf1: serine-threonine kinases of the Raf family; FasL: Fas ligand; IL-2: interleukin-2; IL-4: interleukin-4; IL-18: interleukin-18; LIGHT: a member of TNF cytokine family; L1HPV16: capsid protein L1HPV16; MTDH: metadherin; NY-ESO-1: testis antigen; PSA: prostate-specific antigen; HPV16E7: human papillomavirus protein E7; TRAIL: TNF-related apoptosis-inducing ligand; TNF-α: tumor necrosis factor α; VEGFR-2: vascular endothelial growth factor receptor-2; NK: natural killer; IFN-γ: interferon γ.