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Prodrug-conjugated tumor-seeking commensals for targeted cancer therapy.

Haosheng ShenChangyu ZhangShengjie LiYuanmei LiangLi Ting LeeNikhil AggarwalKwok Soon WunJing LiuSaravanan Prabhu NadarajanCheng WengMatthew W ChangJoshua K TayDe Yun WangShao Q YaoIn Young HwangYung Seng LeeMatthew Wook Chang
Published in: Nature communications (2024)
Prodrugs have been explored as an alternative to conventional chemotherapy; however, their target specificity remains limited. The tumor microenvironment harbors a range of microorganisms that potentially serve as tumor-targeting vectors for delivering prodrugs. In this study, we harness bacteria-cancer interactions native to the tumor microbiome to achieve high target specificity for prodrug delivery. We identify an oral commensal strain of Lactobacillus plantarum with an intrinsic cancer-binding mechanism and engineer the strain to enable the surface loading of anticancer prodrugs, with nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) as a model cancer. The engineered commensals show specific binding to NPC via OppA-mediated recognition of surface heparan sulfate, and the loaded prodrugs are activated by tumor-associated biosignals to release SN-38, a chemotherapy compound, near NPC. In vitro experiments demonstrate that the prodrug-loaded microbes significantly increase the potency of SN-38 against NPC cell lines, up to 10-fold. In a mouse xenograft model, intravenous injection of the engineered L. plantarum leads to bacterial colonization in NPC tumors and a 67% inhibition in tumor growth, enhancing the efficacy of SN-38 by 54%.
Keyphrases
  • cancer therapy
  • drug delivery
  • papillary thyroid
  • squamous cell
  • mental health
  • squamous cell carcinoma
  • radiation therapy
  • ultrasound guided
  • structural basis