A fluorescent stained image of a tumor marking bacterial nanocarriers in pink, cancer cell nuclei in blue, and human mitochondria (another indicator of tumor cells) in green.
Biomedical engineers at Duke University have recruited an unlikely ally in the fight against the deadliest form of brain
Clinicians sorely need new treatment approaches for glioblastoma, the most aggressive form of brain cancer. The
The Duke team decided to pursue an aggressive treatment option to match its opponent, turning to the bacterium Salmonella typhimurium. With a few genetic tweaks, the engineers turned the bacterium into a
The results appeared online on December 21, 2016, in the journal Molecular Therapy — Oncolytics.
«Since glioblastoma is so aggressive and difficult to treat, any change in the median survival rate is a big deal," said Johnathan Lyon, a PhD student working with Ravi Bellamkonda, Vinik Dean of Duke’s Pratt School of Engineering, whose laboratory is currently transitioning to Duke from Georgia Tech, where much of the work was completed. «And since few survive a glioblastoma diagnosis indefinitely, a 20 percent effective cure rate is phenomenal and very encouraging.»
Previous studies have shown, quite accidentally, that the presence of bacteria can cause the immune system to recognize and begin attacking tumors. However,
To use these common intestinal bacteria as
Tumors just so happen to be an excellent source of purine, causing the bacteria to flock to them in droves.
Then, the Duke engineers made a series of genetic tweaks so that the bacteria would produce two compounds called Azurin and p53 that instruct cells to commit
«A major challenge in treating gliomas is that the tumor is dispersed with no clear edge, making them difficult to completely surgically remove. So designing bacteria to actively move and seek out these distributed tumors, and express their
The researchers tested the modified bacteria by injecting them directly into the rats’ brains. While this may sound like an extreme delivery option, the first course of action usually performed with glioblastoma is to surgically remove the primary tumor, if possible, leaving the opportunity to directly deliver therapeutics.
The treatment worked in 20 percent of the rats, causing complete tumor regression and extending their lives by 100 days, which translates to roughly 10 human years.
In the 80 percent that did not survive, however, the treatment didn’t change the length of time the rats survived. After testing for common signs of resistance to the
«It might just be a case of needing to monitor the treatment’s progression and provide more doses at crucial points in the cancer’s development," said Lyon. «However, this was our first attempt at designing such a therapy, and there is some nuance to the specific model we used, thus more experiments are needed to know for sure.»
The researchers now plan to program their bacteria to produce different drugs that cause stronger reactions in the tumors. These will be more difficult to implement, however, as other drugs are not as specific to tumor cells as those used in this study, making potential side effects more of a concern.
This research was supported by the Ian’s Friends Foundation, Ann Rankin Cowan, Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta and Georgia Research Alliance.
Source: http://pratt.duke.edu/about/news/tumor-seeking-salmonella-treats-brain-tumors