Lactic Acid Bacteria-Derived Postbiotics as Adjunctive Agents in Breast Cancer Treatment to Boost the Antineoplastic Effect of a Conventional Therapeutic Comprising Tamoxifen and a New Drug Candidate: An Aziridine-Hydrazide Hydrazone Derivative.
Joanna WasiakPola GłowackaAgnieszka Małgorzata PudlarzAdam M PieczonkaKatarzyna DzitkoJanusz Zbigniew SzemrajMonika Witusik-PerkowskaPublished in: Molecules (Basel, Switzerland) (2024)
Breast cancer is associated with high mortality and morbidity rates. As about 20-30% of patients exhibiting ER-positive phenotype are resistant to hormonal treatment with the standard drug tamoxifen, finding new therapies is a necessity. Postbiotics, metabolites, and macromolecules isolated from probiotic bacteria cultures have been proven to have sufficient bioactivity to exert prohealth and anticancer effects, making them viable adjunctive agents for the treatment of various neoplasms, including breast cancer. In the current study, postbiotics derived from L. plantarum and L. rhamnosus cultures were assessed on an in vitro breast cancer model as potential adjunctive agents to therapy utilizing tamoxifen and a candidate aziridine-hydrazide hydrazone derivative drug. Cell viability and cell death processes, including apoptosis, were analyzed for neoplastic MCF-7 cells treated with postbiotics and synthetic compounds. Cell cycle progression and proliferation were analyzed by PI-based flow cytometry and Ki-67 immunostaining. Postbiotics decreased viability and triggered apoptosis in MCF-7, modestly affecting the cell cycle and showing a lack of negative impact on normal cell viability. Moreover, they enhanced the cytotoxic effect of tamoxifen and the new candidate drug toward MCF-7, accelerating apoptosis and the inhibition of proliferation. This illustrates postbiotics' potential as natural adjunctive agents supporting anticancer therapy based on synthetic drugs.
Keyphrases
- cell cycle
- breast cancer cells
- cell cycle arrest
- cell death
- cell proliferation
- estrogen receptor
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- oxidative stress
- flow cytometry
- lactic acid
- pi k akt
- induced apoptosis
- positive breast cancer
- end stage renal disease
- signaling pathway
- newly diagnosed
- drug induced
- adverse drug
- chronic kidney disease
- bone marrow
- young adults
- ms ms
- human health
- cardiovascular events
- emergency department
- radiation therapy
- risk assessment
- breast cancer risk
- combination therapy
- peritoneal dialysis
- mesenchymal stem cells
- adipose tissue
- prognostic factors
- coronary artery disease
- climate change
- replacement therapy
- patient reported
- bacillus subtilis