4.3 Review

Use of bacteria as anticancer agents

Journal

EXPERT OPINION ON BIOLOGICAL THERAPY
Volume 1, Issue 2, Pages 291-300

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1517/14712598.1.2.291

Keywords

anticancer agents; bacterial genes; bacterial toxins; chemotherapy; cytotoxic agents; drug sensitivity genes; gene directed enzyme prodrug therapy; gene therapy; genetically engineered bacteria; glioblastoma multiforme; immunotoxin; oncolysis; prodrugs; type III secretion; yersinia outer protein

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Historically, bacteria were used as oncolytic agents for malignant brain tumours. Advances in bacteriology and molecular biology have widened the scope of bacterial approaches to cancer therapy and various possibilities include the use of bacteria as sensitising agents for chemotherapy, as delivery agents for anticancer drugs, and as vectors for gene therapy. Bacterial toxins can be used for tumour destruction and cancer vaccines can be based on immunotoxins of bacterial origin. The most promising approaches are the use of genetically modified bacteria for selective destruction of tumours, and bacterial gene-directed enzyme prodrug therapy. Knowledge gained from study of bacterial genomes forms an important basis of use of bacteria as anticancer agents. TAPET (Tumour Amplified Protein Expression Therapy) uses a genetically altered strain of Salmonella as a bacterial vector, or vehicle, for preferentially delivering anticancer drugs to solid tumours. Verotoxin 1 (VT1) of Escherichia coli has been used for ex vivo purging of human bone marrow of cancer cells before autologous bone marrow transplant. E. coli genes and enzymes have become part of well-known prodrug approaches to cancer in which inert prodrugs can be converted in vivo to highly active species. IL-4 fused with Pseudomonas exotoxin has been administered directly into malignant brain turnours and binds with high affinity to IL-4 receptors, which do not exist on normal brain cells, thus destroying a major part of the tumour without harming the normal brain tissue. It is in Phase I/II clinical trials in patients with glioblastoma. No ideal anticancer agent of bacterial origin that is applicable to all types of cancers has been discovered yet. The most promising approach to malignant brain rumours appears to be the use of genetically engineered bacteria that destroy the tumour selectively while sparing the normal brain tissue.

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