| Literature DB >> 32055785 |
Amin Zargar1,2, Samantha Chang1, Ankita Kothari3, Antoine M Snijders3, Jian-Hua Mao3, Jessica Wang1, Amanda C Hernández1,4, Jay D Keasling1,2, Trever G Bivona5,6.
Abstract
Despite tremendous efforts to fight cancer, it remains a major public health problem and a leading cause of death worldwide. With increased knowledge of cancer pathways and improved technological platforms, precision therapeutics that specifically target aberrant cancer pathways have improved patient outcomes. Nevertheless, a primary cause of unsuccessful cancer therapy remains cancer drug resistance. In this review, we summarize the broad classes of resistance to cancer therapy, particularly pharmacokinetics, the tumor microenvironment, and drug resistance mechanisms. Furthermore, we describe how bacterial-mediated cancer therapy, a bygone mode of treatment, has been revitalized by synthetic biology and is uniquely suited to address the primary resistance mechanisms that confound traditional therapies. Through genetic engineering, we discuss how bacteria can be potent anticancer agents given their tumor targeting potential, anti-tumor activity, safety, and coordinated delivery of anti-cancer drugs.Entities:
Keywords: Bacterial-mediated therapy; Cancer therapy; Drug resistance; Synthetic biology
Year: 2020 PMID: 32055785 PMCID: PMC7004931 DOI: 10.1016/j.cdtm.2019.11.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chronic Dis Transl Med ISSN: 2095-882X
Fig. 1Drug formulations with poor ADME profiles can result in incomplete tumor remission leading to a refractory response.
Fig. 2Tumors with an extensive extracellular matrix can result in incomplete penetration of anticancer drugs leading to incomplete anti-tumor therapy and tumor refraction.
Fig. 3Tumor heterogeneity can result in subpopulations of cells with distinct molecular signatures with varying drug sensitivities. Drug-sensitive cells can be eliminated while a drug-resistant subpopulation can cause tumor refraction.
Fig. 4A genetically engineered bacterium can overcome the multifactorial challenges of drug resistance. The bacteria can actively target the tumor site without producing the anticancer compound, reducing off-site toxicity. After reaching the tumor, the bacteria can burrow past the extensive ECM into the hypoxic tumor core. Once the bacteria has colonized the tumor, genetic switches activated by quorum sensing or the tumor microenvironment produce multiple therapies that target parallel disease pathways resulting in complete tumor elimination.
Fig. 5Workflow of process to identify tumor targeting peptides. A library of known peptides that bind specific cancer receptors is engineered to display on the bacterial cell surface and screened against normal cells and the target cancer cell line.
Fig. 6Control mechanisms to maintain bacterial population. Genetic circuits have been created to maintain bacterial population in microfluidic devices. Adapted to colonization of cancer sites, initial colonization would contain few cells and signaling molecules (left-most bubble). Cell growth reaches a critical threshold and the signaling molecule causes lysis in a subset of the population, which then undergoes growth again until the threshold is reached again.