학술논문

Enhanced bacterial cancer therapy delivering therapeutic RNA interference of c-Myc
Document Type
article
Source
Cell & Bioscience, Vol 14, Iss 1, Pp 1-15 (2024)
Subject
Bacterial therapy
RNAi
Colorectal cancer & breast cancer
Biotechnology
TP248.13-248.65
Biology (General)
QH301-705.5
Biochemistry
QD415-436
Language
English
ISSN
2045-3701
Abstract
Abstract Background Bacterial cancer therapy was first trialled in patients at the end of the nineteenth century. More recently, tumour-targeting bacteria have been harnessed to deliver plasmid-expressed therapeutic interfering RNA to a range of solid tumours. A major limitation to clinical translation of this is the short-term nature of RNA interference in vivo due to plasmid instability. To overcome this, we sought to develop tumour-targeting attenuated bacteria that stably express shRNA by virtue of integration of an expression cassette within the bacterial chromosome and demonstrate therapeutic efficacy in vitro and in vivo. Results The attenuated tumour targeting Salmonella typhimurium SL7207 strain was modified to carry chromosomally integrated shRNA expression cassettes at the xylA locus. The colorectal cancer cell lines SW480, HCT116 and breast cancer cell line MCF7 were used to demonstrate the ability of these modified strains to perform intracellular infection and deliver effective RNA and protein knockdown of the target gene c-Myc. In vivo therapeutic efficacy was demonstrated using the Lgr5creER T2 Apc flx/flx and BlgCreBrca2 flx/fl p53 flx/flx orthotopic immunocompetent mouse models of colorectal and breast cancer, respectively. In vitro co-cultures of breast and colorectal cancer cell lines with modified SL7207 demonstrated a significant 50–95% (P