4.8 Article

Programmable probiotics for detection of cancer in urine

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SCIENCE TRANSLATIONAL MEDICINE
卷 7, 期 289, 页码 -

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AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.aaa3519

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资金

  1. Ludwig Center for Molecular Oncology at MIT
  2. Amar G. Bose Research Grant
  3. San Diego Center for Systems Biology (NIH) [P50 GM085764]
  4. National Institutes of Health and General Medicine [R01GM69811]
  5. Koch Institute Support (core) from the National Cancer Institute [P30-CA14051]
  6. Core Center Grant from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences [P30-ES002109]
  7. Misrock
  8. National Research Service Awards Postdoctoral Fellowships
  9. National Defense Science and Engineering Graduate Fellowship
  10. Career Award at the Scientific Interface from the Burroughs Wellcome Fund

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Rapid advances in the forward engineering of genetic circuitry in living cells has positioned synthetic biology as a potential means to solve numerous biomedical problems, including disease diagnosis and therapy. One challenge in exploiting synthetic biology for translational applications is to engineer microbes that are well tolerated by patients and seamlessly integrate with existing clinical methods. We use the safe and widely used probiotic Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 to develop an orally administered diagnostic that can noninvasively indicate the presence of liver metastasis by producing easily detectable signals in urine. Our microbial diagnostic generated a high-contrast urine signal through selective expansion in liver metastases (106-fold enrichment) and high expression of a lacZ reporter maintained by engineering a stable plasmid system. The lacZ reporter cleaves a substrate to produce a small molecule that can be detected in urine. E. coli Nissle 1917 robustly colonized tumor tissue in rodent models of liver metastasis after oral delivery but did not colonize healthy organs or fibrotic liver tissue. We saw no deleterious health effects on the mice for more than 12 months after oral delivery. Our results demonstrate that probiotics can be programmed to safely and selectively deliver synthetic gene circuits to diseased tissue microenvironments in vivo.

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