4.6 Article

Antineoplastic activity of Salmonella Typhimurium outer membrane nanovesicles

Journal

EXPERIMENTAL CELL RESEARCH
Volume 399, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.yexcr.2020.112423

Keywords

Bacterial outer membrane vesicles; Salmonella, antitumor; Apoptosis; Autophagy; Angiogenesis

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ST-OMVs significantly reduced tumor volume, increased tumor growth inhibition rate, promoted apoptosis, decreased tumor invasion and mitotic activities at the cellular level. Thus, it may be used as a potential safe antitumor immunotherapy or an adjuvant to conventional chemotherapeutic drugs.
Nano-sized Gram-negative bacterial outer membrane vesicles possess unique structural and immunostimulatory effects that could be exploited to regress tumors by alerting the host immune system and reversing the immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment. The current study was conducted to investigate the antitumor activity of the outer membrane vesicles (ST-OMVs) of Salmonella Typhimurium ATCC 14028, in vitro in human colorectal carcinoma (HTC116), breast cancer (MCF-7), and hepatocellular carcinoma (HepG2) cell lines and in vivo in Ehrlich solid carcinoma-bearing mice model either as a mono-immunotherapy or as an adjuvant to a commonly used conventional chemotherapy. In addition, we investigated the safety of ST-OMVs. Adult Swiss albino female mice with transplanted Ehrlich solid carcinoma were treated with either ST-OMVs, paclitaxel or a combination of both. Tumor volume, growth inhibition rate, quantitative RT-PCR of Bax and VEGF genes expression, histopathology and immune-expression of caspase-3, Beclin-1, CD49b and Ki-67 were all analyzed. Our results showed that ST-OMVs significantly decreased tumor volume, significantly increased tumor growth inhibition rate, upregulated the immunohistochemical expression of caspase-3, Beclin-1, and CD49b (enhanced recruitment of NK cells). Furthermore, ST-OMVs down-regulated the expression of Ki-67, increased Bax gene expression and decreased VEGF gene expression as detected by qRT-PCR analysis. Histologically, ST-OMVs promoted apoptosis, decreased tumor invasion and mitotic activities. Moreover, ST-OMVs showed a remarkable cytotoxic activity in various investigated in vitro cancer cell lines. Our findings demonstrate potential antitumor activity of ST-OMVs that might be used as a promising safe antitumor immunotherapy or an adjuvant to conventional chemotherapeutic drugs, resolving some of their problems.

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