Bacterial minicells to the rescue: cyto-Immunotherapy for the treatment of late stage cancers with minimal to no toxicity

IF 4.8 2区 生物学 Q1 BIOTECHNOLOGY & APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY Microbial Biotechnology Pub Date : 2021-10-19 DOI:10.1111/1751-7915.13952
Himanshu Brahmbhatt, Jennifer A. MacDiarmid
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Throughout this time, there was a major effort to discover antigens that were tumour-specific with a hope that tumour-targeted therapies could be developed with minimal toxicity to normal tissues. This effort has yet to bear fruit.</p><p>This issue focuses the mind on taking a step back and learning from history, getting to the roots of the problem and deciphering if there is a better way to address it so that we are able to pursue a more realistic path in the decade to come.</p><p>Interestingly, microbial cells may offer solutions to these seemingly insurmountable problems.</p><p>Given that most cancer cells elaborate a sophisticated plethora of drug resistance and immune-suppressive mechanisms, is there any way to overcome multi-drug resistance in cancer cells? Going after each different drug resistance mechanism or individual targets would again lead to hundreds of drugs with attendant toxicities and appropriate therapy would be impossible. Additionally, experience shows that targeting just one or two pathways can be easily overcome by tumour cells since they elaborate a multitude of different drug resistance pathways which can overcome single hits.</p><p>It is known for some time that there are cytotoxic drugs that can overcome multiple drug resistance mechanisms simply by virtue of the fact that these drugs are super-poisons. Examples include (i) PNU-159682, a metabolite of the anthracycline nemorubicin, a highly potent DNA topoisomerase I inhibitor which is over 2000-fold more toxic than conventional drug doxorubicin, (ii) Duocarmycin which is a DNA minor groove-binding alkylating agent, (iii) Maytansine, a benzoansamacrolide, a highly potent microtubule-targeted compound that induces mitotic arrest and kills tumour cells at sub-nanomolar concentrations etc. Unfortunately, these drugs cannot be administered in patients as free chemotherapy since they are too toxic and would kill a person due to rapid and widespread killing of normal cells. These drugs are being developed as antibody-drug conjugates but even then, they are seriously toxic in patients.</p><p>If it were possible to safely administer these drugs into cancer patients so that the drug is specifically taken up inside cancer cells and not normal cells, then it should be possible to kill even the most drug-resistant cancer cells. Bacterial minicells which are anucleate nanoparticles produced as a result of inactivating the genes that control normal bacterial cell division (de Boer and Crossley, <span>1989</span>; Lutkenhaus and Addinall, <span>1997</span>; Ma and King, <span>2004</span>) thereby derepressing polar sites of cell fission, may provide a solution to these and other obstacles to cytotoxic drug delivery.</p><p>Genetically defined <i>min</i>CDE- chromosomal deletion mutants were generated from <i>Salmonella enterica</i> serovar Typhimurium (S. Typhimurium) (MacDiarmid <i>et al</i>., <span>2007</span>, <span>2009</span>). The minicells were shown to be 400 nm in diameter (hence referred to here as nanocells or EDV™; EnGeneIC Dream Vector), anucleate, non-living and carry the outer and inner membrane surrounding an empty cytoplasm. The EDVs were shown to readily package a range of different cytotoxic drugs or nucleic acids including the super-poisons mentioned above and interestingly, once packaged in the cytoplasm, the drug does not leak out of the EDV as was demonstrated in Phase I and Phase IIa clinical trials (on-going) in over 170 end-stage cancer patients who have received over 2400 EDV doses carrying different cytotoxic drugs (Kao <i>et al</i>., <span>2015</span>; Solomon <i>et al</i>., <span>2015</span>; van Zandwijk <i>et al</i>., <span>2017</span>; Sagnella <i>et al</i>., <span>2020</span>). These patients show little to no toxicity despite repeat intravenous (i.v.) dosing with many patients receiving 15 to 70 repeat doses. Given that the EDV surface is coated with lipopolysaccharide (LPS), single-chain bispecific antibodies were attached to the EDV surface where one arm of the antibody is directed to the O-polysaccharide epitopes and the other arm is directed to a tumour cell surface receptor for example Epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) which is found on the surface of over 70% of solid tumours.</p><p>Drug-packaged, antibody-targeted EDVs can be readily produced in high yield and purified free of parental bacteria, membrane blebs, nucleic acids, cellular debris and free endotoxin, using pharmaceutical cross-flow and dead-end filters. The final therapeutic is lyophilized and stored and shipped anywhere in the world at 4°C. The vials are stored in the hospital pharmacy and when a patient is to be dosed, 2 ml of sterile water for injection is added to reconstitute the EDVs.</p><p>The EGFR-targeted, PNU-packaged EDVs are injected i.v. and because of their relatively large size (~ 400 nm diameter) they are retained in the normal blood circulation since the gaps between endothelial cells lining the blood vessels is less than 2 nm. However, it is known that cancer cells require access to blood vessels for growth and metastasis and hence they over-express pro-angiogenic factors which leads to the development of disorganized blood vessel networks that are fundamentally different from normal vasculature. Tumour vasculature is typified by aberrant structural dynamics and vessels that are immature and hyperpermeable (Siemann, <span>2011</span>). The fenestrations in these blood vessels can range for 20 nm to over 4 μm (Hashizume <i>et al</i>., <span>2000</span>).</p><p>The EDVs being 400 nm rapidly fall out of these fenestrations and enter into the tumour microenvironment and since they carry the bispecific antibody on the EDV surface, the anti-EGFR component binds to EGFR on the tumour cell surface. This provokes macropinocytosis and the EDVs are taken into the early endosomes, followed by lysosomes and broken down in these organelles releasing the drug PNU-159682. The drug enters into the tumour cell cytoplasm and the nucleus and intercalates with the chromosomal DNA resulting in tumour cell apoptosis. In the event that a tumour type does not express EGFR for example liver cancer, which expresses asialoglycoprotein, then the bispecific antibody can be changed to anti-asialoglycoprotein while the anti-O-polysaccharide component remains constant. Similarly, HER-2 positive breast cancers can be targeted via anti-HER2/anti-O-polysaccharide bispecific antibody.</p><p>This is the first time a super-cytotoxic drug has been administered into human cancer patients with no toxicity. The double membrane structure of the EDVs prevented leakage of the drug in general circulation, the large size of the EDVs allow it to avoid the normal tissues that are surrounded by normal sealed blood vessels, the tumour-associated leaky vasculature allows the EDV to enter specifically into the tumour microenvironment, the bispecific antibody targeting of the EDVs allow it to enter specifically into tumour cells and the lysosomal degradation machinery allowed the EDV to be broken down intracellularly and release the drug that could overcome drug resistance and for the first time, kill tumour cells that are highly drug resistant with no toxicity. All 170 cancer patients treated so far were end-stage palliative care patients who had run out of all treatment options. Highly significant anti-tumour efficacy has been observed in mesothelioma (Kao <i>et al</i>., <span>2015</span>), glioblastoma and pancreatic cancer (Sagnella <i>et al</i>., <span>2020</span>).</p><p>Given that the body’s own immune system has the potential to augment anti-tumour efficacy, it would be ideal if one could simultaneously harness this potential without toxicity associated with current immunotherapies.</p><p>The EDVs that are in general blood circulation, and which have not entered into the tumour microenvironment, are rapidly recognized as foreign via the pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPS) such as LPS by professional phagocytes (APCs) being macrophages and dendritic cells (DCs) which are present in the lymph nodes, liver and spleen. Recognition of PAMPS results in the APCs releasing ‘alarm signals’ like ATP (Matzinger, <span>1994</span>) which are picked up by the resting monocytes in the bone marrow. These cells are then activated and undergo maturation and proliferation and release M1 (tumoricidal) macrophages and activated DCs into the general circulation.</p><p>In the meantime, the dying tumour cells in the tumour microenvironment (due to the EDVs releasing cytotoxic drug intracellularly) release ‘find-me’ signals such as low levels of nucleotides ATP and UTP, fractalkine, lysophosphatidyl choline, or sphingosine 1-phosphate, which attract APCs to the sites of death within the tissue (Gregory, <span>2009</span>). The apoptotic cells that expose ‘eat-me’ signals such as calreticulin, phosphatidyl serine, on the cell surface, promotes specific recognition by the APC and subsequent internalization of the dying cell (Grimsley and Ravichandran, <span>2003</span>). The apoptotic tumour cell is degraded intracellularly and the released protein antigens are processed and presented on the cell surface via MHC Class I and II molecules. These APCs then migrate to the draining lymph nodes where they present the tumour antigens to CD4+ and CD8+ T cells (Sagnella <i>et al</i>., <span>2020</span>). Once the CD8+ T cells get activated following recognition of tumour-specific antigens on the APC surface, they home into the tumour microenvironment, recognize the tumour antigens on the live tumour cells and post-tumour antigen engagement, they secrete perforins and kill those tumour cells (Sagnella <i>et al</i>., <span>2020</span>).</p><p>This cascade of events continues to escalate as more APCs are attracted to the new dying tumour cells, engulf them, go to the draining lymph nodes and activate more CD8+ cytotoxic T cells. This cascade then results in tumour antigen-specific CD8+ effector memory T cells that provide long-term immunity to the specific cancer (Sagnella <i>et al</i>., <span>2020</span>).</p><p>The polar sites of septum formation in Gram −ve and Gram +ve bacteria are thought to be vestigial sites of cell division left over from bacterial evolution and it is possible that the minicell may have been the primordial cell during the path of bacterial evolution. The minicell may therefore be considered to be a very early ancestor of bacteria that existed millions to possibly billions of years ago.</p><p>Today, it re-emerges to offer a way forward in the intractable problem of cancer treatment. These minicells offer solutions required for treatment of late-stage cancers with little toxicity, both by killing cancer cells and stimulating a robust anti-tumour immune response, in effect, allowing the patient’s own immune cells to help in the heavy lifting of getting the patient back on his/her feet. No drug or immunotherapy comes near the minicell as a one-stop-shop for cancer treatment and for the next 15 years, the bacterial minicell is likely to radically change how cancer is treated.</p><p>No funding information provided.</p><p>The authors have no conflict of interest to declare.</p>","PeriodicalId":49145,"journal":{"name":"Microbial Biotechnology","volume":"15 1","pages":"91-94"},"PeriodicalIF":4.8000,"publicationDate":"2021-10-19","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/1751-7915.13952","citationCount":"4","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Microbial Biotechnology","FirstCategoryId":"5","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1751-7915.13952","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"生物学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"BIOTECHNOLOGY & APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 4

Abstract

In the early 1900s, German chemist, Paul Ehrlich commenced developing drugs to treat infectious diseases and coined the term ‘chemotherapy’ defining it as the use of chemicals to treat disease. He developed the first alkylating agents, to treat cancer.

While some spectacular cures were observed with each of these approaches, most patients experienced tumour relapse and eventually succumbed to the disease. These advances provided an incremental advance in the treatment of cancer and almost all of them were associated with moderate to severe toxicity. Throughout this time, there was a major effort to discover antigens that were tumour-specific with a hope that tumour-targeted therapies could be developed with minimal toxicity to normal tissues. This effort has yet to bear fruit.

This issue focuses the mind on taking a step back and learning from history, getting to the roots of the problem and deciphering if there is a better way to address it so that we are able to pursue a more realistic path in the decade to come.

Interestingly, microbial cells may offer solutions to these seemingly insurmountable problems.

Given that most cancer cells elaborate a sophisticated plethora of drug resistance and immune-suppressive mechanisms, is there any way to overcome multi-drug resistance in cancer cells? Going after each different drug resistance mechanism or individual targets would again lead to hundreds of drugs with attendant toxicities and appropriate therapy would be impossible. Additionally, experience shows that targeting just one or two pathways can be easily overcome by tumour cells since they elaborate a multitude of different drug resistance pathways which can overcome single hits.

It is known for some time that there are cytotoxic drugs that can overcome multiple drug resistance mechanisms simply by virtue of the fact that these drugs are super-poisons. Examples include (i) PNU-159682, a metabolite of the anthracycline nemorubicin, a highly potent DNA topoisomerase I inhibitor which is over 2000-fold more toxic than conventional drug doxorubicin, (ii) Duocarmycin which is a DNA minor groove-binding alkylating agent, (iii) Maytansine, a benzoansamacrolide, a highly potent microtubule-targeted compound that induces mitotic arrest and kills tumour cells at sub-nanomolar concentrations etc. Unfortunately, these drugs cannot be administered in patients as free chemotherapy since they are too toxic and would kill a person due to rapid and widespread killing of normal cells. These drugs are being developed as antibody-drug conjugates but even then, they are seriously toxic in patients.

If it were possible to safely administer these drugs into cancer patients so that the drug is specifically taken up inside cancer cells and not normal cells, then it should be possible to kill even the most drug-resistant cancer cells. Bacterial minicells which are anucleate nanoparticles produced as a result of inactivating the genes that control normal bacterial cell division (de Boer and Crossley, 1989; Lutkenhaus and Addinall, 1997; Ma and King, 2004) thereby derepressing polar sites of cell fission, may provide a solution to these and other obstacles to cytotoxic drug delivery.

Genetically defined minCDE- chromosomal deletion mutants were generated from Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium (S. Typhimurium) (MacDiarmid et al., 2007, 2009). The minicells were shown to be 400 nm in diameter (hence referred to here as nanocells or EDV™; EnGeneIC Dream Vector), anucleate, non-living and carry the outer and inner membrane surrounding an empty cytoplasm. The EDVs were shown to readily package a range of different cytotoxic drugs or nucleic acids including the super-poisons mentioned above and interestingly, once packaged in the cytoplasm, the drug does not leak out of the EDV as was demonstrated in Phase I and Phase IIa clinical trials (on-going) in over 170 end-stage cancer patients who have received over 2400 EDV doses carrying different cytotoxic drugs (Kao et al., 2015; Solomon et al., 2015; van Zandwijk et al., 2017; Sagnella et al., 2020). These patients show little to no toxicity despite repeat intravenous (i.v.) dosing with many patients receiving 15 to 70 repeat doses. Given that the EDV surface is coated with lipopolysaccharide (LPS), single-chain bispecific antibodies were attached to the EDV surface where one arm of the antibody is directed to the O-polysaccharide epitopes and the other arm is directed to a tumour cell surface receptor for example Epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) which is found on the surface of over 70% of solid tumours.

Drug-packaged, antibody-targeted EDVs can be readily produced in high yield and purified free of parental bacteria, membrane blebs, nucleic acids, cellular debris and free endotoxin, using pharmaceutical cross-flow and dead-end filters. The final therapeutic is lyophilized and stored and shipped anywhere in the world at 4°C. The vials are stored in the hospital pharmacy and when a patient is to be dosed, 2 ml of sterile water for injection is added to reconstitute the EDVs.

The EGFR-targeted, PNU-packaged EDVs are injected i.v. and because of their relatively large size (~ 400 nm diameter) they are retained in the normal blood circulation since the gaps between endothelial cells lining the blood vessels is less than 2 nm. However, it is known that cancer cells require access to blood vessels for growth and metastasis and hence they over-express pro-angiogenic factors which leads to the development of disorganized blood vessel networks that are fundamentally different from normal vasculature. Tumour vasculature is typified by aberrant structural dynamics and vessels that are immature and hyperpermeable (Siemann, 2011). The fenestrations in these blood vessels can range for 20 nm to over 4 μm (Hashizume et al., 2000).

The EDVs being 400 nm rapidly fall out of these fenestrations and enter into the tumour microenvironment and since they carry the bispecific antibody on the EDV surface, the anti-EGFR component binds to EGFR on the tumour cell surface. This provokes macropinocytosis and the EDVs are taken into the early endosomes, followed by lysosomes and broken down in these organelles releasing the drug PNU-159682. The drug enters into the tumour cell cytoplasm and the nucleus and intercalates with the chromosomal DNA resulting in tumour cell apoptosis. In the event that a tumour type does not express EGFR for example liver cancer, which expresses asialoglycoprotein, then the bispecific antibody can be changed to anti-asialoglycoprotein while the anti-O-polysaccharide component remains constant. Similarly, HER-2 positive breast cancers can be targeted via anti-HER2/anti-O-polysaccharide bispecific antibody.

This is the first time a super-cytotoxic drug has been administered into human cancer patients with no toxicity. The double membrane structure of the EDVs prevented leakage of the drug in general circulation, the large size of the EDVs allow it to avoid the normal tissues that are surrounded by normal sealed blood vessels, the tumour-associated leaky vasculature allows the EDV to enter specifically into the tumour microenvironment, the bispecific antibody targeting of the EDVs allow it to enter specifically into tumour cells and the lysosomal degradation machinery allowed the EDV to be broken down intracellularly and release the drug that could overcome drug resistance and for the first time, kill tumour cells that are highly drug resistant with no toxicity. All 170 cancer patients treated so far were end-stage palliative care patients who had run out of all treatment options. Highly significant anti-tumour efficacy has been observed in mesothelioma (Kao et al., 2015), glioblastoma and pancreatic cancer (Sagnella et al., 2020).

Given that the body’s own immune system has the potential to augment anti-tumour efficacy, it would be ideal if one could simultaneously harness this potential without toxicity associated with current immunotherapies.

The EDVs that are in general blood circulation, and which have not entered into the tumour microenvironment, are rapidly recognized as foreign via the pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPS) such as LPS by professional phagocytes (APCs) being macrophages and dendritic cells (DCs) which are present in the lymph nodes, liver and spleen. Recognition of PAMPS results in the APCs releasing ‘alarm signals’ like ATP (Matzinger, 1994) which are picked up by the resting monocytes in the bone marrow. These cells are then activated and undergo maturation and proliferation and release M1 (tumoricidal) macrophages and activated DCs into the general circulation.

In the meantime, the dying tumour cells in the tumour microenvironment (due to the EDVs releasing cytotoxic drug intracellularly) release ‘find-me’ signals such as low levels of nucleotides ATP and UTP, fractalkine, lysophosphatidyl choline, or sphingosine 1-phosphate, which attract APCs to the sites of death within the tissue (Gregory, 2009). The apoptotic cells that expose ‘eat-me’ signals such as calreticulin, phosphatidyl serine, on the cell surface, promotes specific recognition by the APC and subsequent internalization of the dying cell (Grimsley and Ravichandran, 2003). The apoptotic tumour cell is degraded intracellularly and the released protein antigens are processed and presented on the cell surface via MHC Class I and II molecules. These APCs then migrate to the draining lymph nodes where they present the tumour antigens to CD4+ and CD8+ T cells (Sagnella et al., 2020). Once the CD8+ T cells get activated following recognition of tumour-specific antigens on the APC surface, they home into the tumour microenvironment, recognize the tumour antigens on the live tumour cells and post-tumour antigen engagement, they secrete perforins and kill those tumour cells (Sagnella et al., 2020).

This cascade of events continues to escalate as more APCs are attracted to the new dying tumour cells, engulf them, go to the draining lymph nodes and activate more CD8+ cytotoxic T cells. This cascade then results in tumour antigen-specific CD8+ effector memory T cells that provide long-term immunity to the specific cancer (Sagnella et al., 2020).

The polar sites of septum formation in Gram −ve and Gram +ve bacteria are thought to be vestigial sites of cell division left over from bacterial evolution and it is possible that the minicell may have been the primordial cell during the path of bacterial evolution. The minicell may therefore be considered to be a very early ancestor of bacteria that existed millions to possibly billions of years ago.

Today, it re-emerges to offer a way forward in the intractable problem of cancer treatment. These minicells offer solutions required for treatment of late-stage cancers with little toxicity, both by killing cancer cells and stimulating a robust anti-tumour immune response, in effect, allowing the patient’s own immune cells to help in the heavy lifting of getting the patient back on his/her feet. No drug or immunotherapy comes near the minicell as a one-stop-shop for cancer treatment and for the next 15 years, the bacterial minicell is likely to radically change how cancer is treated.

No funding information provided.

The authors have no conflict of interest to declare.

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细菌小细胞拯救:细胞免疫疗法治疗晚期癌症,毒性很小,甚至没有毒性
20世纪初,德国化学家保罗·埃利希开始开发治疗传染病的药物,并创造了“化疗”一词,将其定义为使用化学物质治疗疾病。他发明了第一种烷基化剂,用于治疗癌症。虽然每一种方法都有一些惊人的疗效,但大多数患者都经历了肿瘤复发,最终死于这种疾病。这些进展为癌症治疗提供了一个渐进的进展,几乎所有这些进展都与中度到重度毒性有关。在这段时间里,人们一直在努力发现肿瘤特异性抗原,希望能够开发出对正常组织毒性最小的肿瘤靶向治疗方法。这一努力尚未取得成果。这个问题需要我们从历史中吸取教训,从问题的根源上找出解决问题的更好办法,以便在未来十年走一条更现实的道路。有趣的是,微生物细胞可能为这些看似无法克服的问题提供解决方案。考虑到大多数癌细胞精心设计了复杂的过多的耐药性和免疫抑制机制,有没有办法克服癌细胞的多重耐药性?追踪每一种不同的耐药机制或单个靶点将再次导致数百种药物伴随毒性,而适当的治疗将是不可能的。此外,经验表明,仅针对一两个途径可以很容易地被肿瘤细胞克服,因为它们精心设计了许多不同的耐药途径,可以克服单一的打击。一段时间以来,我们知道有一些细胞毒性药物可以克服多重耐药机制,仅仅是因为这些药物是超级毒药。例子包括(i) pnu159682,一种蒽环类奈莫比星的代谢物,一种高效的DNA拓扑异构酶i抑制剂,其毒性比传统药物多柔比星高2000倍;(ii)多卡霉素,一种DNA微小凹槽结合烷基化剂;(iii)美坦辛,一种苯甲ansamacrolide,一种高效的微管靶向化合物,可诱导有丝分裂停止并在亚纳摩尔浓度下杀死肿瘤细胞等。不幸的是,这些药物不能作为免费的化疗药物给病人使用,因为它们毒性太大,而且会迅速而广泛地杀死正常细胞,从而杀死一个人。这些药物是作为抗体-药物结合物开发的,但即使这样,它们对患者也有严重的毒性。如果有可能安全地将这些药物注射到癌症患者体内,这样药物就会被癌细胞而不是正常细胞吸收,那么就有可能杀死甚至是最耐药的癌细胞。细菌微型细胞是由于控制正常细菌细胞分裂的基因失活而产生的无核纳米颗粒(de Boer和Crossley, 1989;Lutkenhaus and Addinall, 1997;Ma和King, 2004),从而抑制细胞裂变的极性位点,可能为这些和其他细胞毒性药物递送障碍提供解决方案。从肠道沙门氏菌血清型鼠伤寒沙门氏菌(S. Typhimurium)中产生基因定义的minCDE-染色体缺失突变(MacDiarmid et al., 2007, 2009)。微型电池的直径为400纳米(因此在这里称为纳米电池或EDV™;基因梦想载体),无核的,无生命的,携带着包围着一个空细胞质的内外膜。研究表明,EDV可以很容易地包装一系列不同的细胞毒性药物或核酸,包括上述的超级毒物,有趣的是,一旦包装在细胞质中,药物就不会从EDV中泄漏出来,这一点在170多名晚期癌症患者的I期和ii期临床试验(正在进行中)中得到了证明,这些患者接受了超过2400剂量的携带不同细胞毒性药物的EDV (Kao等人,2015;Solomon et al., 2015;van Zandwijk et al., 2017;Sagnella et al., 2020)。尽管多次静脉注射(i.v.)给药,但这些患者几乎没有毒性,许多患者接受15至70次重复给药。考虑到EDV表面被脂多糖(LPS)包裹,单链双特异性抗体附着在EDV表面,其中抗体的一条手臂指向o -多糖表位,另一条手臂指向肿瘤细胞表面受体,例如表皮生长因子受体(EGFR),该受体存在于超过70%的实体肿瘤表面。药物包装的抗体靶向edv可以很容易地以高产量生产,并且使用药物交叉流和终端过滤器纯化不含亲代细菌、膜泡、核酸、细胞碎片和游离内毒素。最终的治疗方法是冻干,并在4°C下储存和运输到世界任何地方。 这些小瓶储存在医院药房,当病人要给药时,加入2毫升无菌注射用水来重建edv。靶向egfr、pnu包装的edv被静脉注射,由于其相对较大的尺寸(直径约400纳米),由于血管内皮细胞之间的间隙小于2纳米,它们被保留在正常的血液循环中。然而,众所周知,癌细胞的生长和转移需要进入血管,因此它们过度表达促血管生成因子,导致无序血管网络的发展,这与正常的血管系统根本不同。肿瘤血管系统的典型特征是异常的结构动力学和不成熟和高渗透性的血管(Siemann, 2011)。这些血管的开孔范围从20纳米到超过4 μm (Hashizume et al., 2000)。400纳米的EDV迅速从这些孔中脱落并进入肿瘤微环境,由于它们在EDV表面携带双特异性抗体,抗EGFR成分与肿瘤细胞表面的EGFR结合。这引起巨量红细胞增多症,edv被带入早期内体,随后进入溶酶体,并在这些细胞器中分解,释放药物PNU-159682。药物进入肿瘤细胞的细胞质和细胞核,与染色体DNA穿插,导致肿瘤细胞凋亡。如果一种肿瘤类型不表达EGFR,例如肝癌,它表达asialal糖蛋白,那么双特异性抗体可以改变为抗asialal糖蛋白,而抗o -多糖成分保持不变。同样,HER-2阳性乳腺癌也可以通过抗her2 /抗o -多糖双特异性抗体靶向治疗。这是超细胞毒性药物首次在没有毒性的情况下用于人类癌症患者。EDV的双膜结构阻止了药物在一般循环中的泄漏,EDV的大尺寸允许它避开被正常密封血管包围的正常组织,肿瘤相关的渗漏血管允许EDV进入肿瘤微环境,靶向EDV的双特异性抗体允许它特异性地进入肿瘤细胞,溶酶体降解机制允许EDV在细胞内被分解并释放出可以克服耐药性的药物,并首次杀死高度耐药的肿瘤细胞而没有毒性。到目前为止,所有接受治疗的170名癌症患者都是已经用尽所有治疗方案的晚期姑息治疗患者。在间皮瘤(Kao et al., 2015)、胶质母细胞瘤和胰腺癌(Sagnella et al., 2020)中观察到非常显著的抗肿瘤疗效。鉴于人体自身的免疫系统具有增强抗肿瘤功效的潜力,如果能够同时利用这种潜力而不产生与当前免疫疗法相关的毒性,那将是理想的。在一般血液循环中,尚未进入肿瘤微环境的edv,通过病原体相关分子模式(PAMPS),如LPS,被专业吞噬细胞(APCs),即存在于淋巴结、肝脏和脾脏中的巨噬细胞和树突状细胞(DCs)迅速识别为外来细胞。对PAMPS的识别导致apc释放像ATP一样的“警报信号”(Matzinger, 1994),这些信号被骨髓中静止的单核细胞接收。这些细胞随后被激活,经历成熟和增殖,并释放M1(杀肿瘤)巨噬细胞和活化的dc进入循环。与此同时,肿瘤微环境中垂死的肿瘤细胞(由于edv在细胞内释放细胞毒性药物)释放“寻找我”信号,如低水平的核苷酸ATP和UTP、fractalkine、溶血磷脂酰胆碱或鞘氨醇1-磷酸,这些信号将apc吸引到组织内的死亡部位(Gregory, 2009)。凋亡细胞在细胞表面暴露“吃我”信号,如钙网蛋白、磷脂酰丝氨酸,促进APC的特异性识别,随后将死亡细胞内化(Grimsley和Ravichandran, 2003)。凋亡的肿瘤细胞在细胞内降解,释放的蛋白抗原通过MHC I类和II类分子加工呈递到细胞表面。然后,这些apc迁移到引流淋巴结,在那里它们将肿瘤抗原呈递给CD4+和CD8+ T细胞(Sagnella et al., 2020)。一旦CD8+ T细胞在APC表面识别肿瘤特异性抗原后被激活,它们就会进入肿瘤微环境,识别活肿瘤细胞上的肿瘤抗原和肿瘤后抗原接合,它们分泌穿孔素并杀死这些肿瘤细胞(Sagnella et al., 2020)。 随着更多的apc被新的垂死的肿瘤细胞吸引,吞噬它们,进入引流淋巴结,激活更多的CD8+细胞毒性T细胞,这一连串的事件继续升级。这种级联反应会产生肿瘤抗原特异性CD8+效应记忆T细胞,提供对特定癌症的长期免疫(Sagnella et al., 2020)。Gram - ve和Gram +ve细菌中隔膜形成的极性位点被认为是细菌进化过程中遗留下来的细胞分裂的残留位点,而小细胞可能是细菌进化过程中的原始细胞。因此,微型细胞可能被认为是存在于数百万年甚至数十亿年前的细菌的一个非常早期的祖先。今天,它重新出现,为棘手的癌症治疗问题提供了一条前进的道路。这些微型细胞提供了治疗晚期癌症所需的解决方案,而且毒性很小,既可以杀死癌细胞,又可以刺激强大的抗肿瘤免疫反应,实际上,可以让患者自身的免疫细胞帮助患者重新站起来。没有任何药物或免疫疗法可以与微型细胞相媲美,成为癌症治疗的一站式服务。在接下来的15年里,细菌微型细胞很可能从根本上改变癌症的治疗方式。没有提供供资资料。作者无利益冲突需要声明。
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来源期刊
Microbial Biotechnology
Microbial Biotechnology BIOTECHNOLOGY & APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY-MICROBIOLOGY
CiteScore
9.80
自引率
3.50%
发文量
162
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Microbial Biotechnology publishes papers of original research reporting significant advances in any aspect of microbial applications, including, but not limited to biotechnologies related to: Green chemistry; Primary metabolites; Food, beverages and supplements; Secondary metabolites and natural products; Pharmaceuticals; Diagnostics; Agriculture; Bioenergy; Biomining, including oil recovery and processing; Bioremediation; Biopolymers, biomaterials; Bionanotechnology; Biosurfactants and bioemulsifiers; Compatible solutes and bioprotectants; Biosensors, monitoring systems, quantitative microbial risk assessment; Technology development; Protein engineering; Functional genomics; Metabolic engineering; Metabolic design; Systems analysis, modelling; Process engineering; Biologically-based analytical methods; Microbially-based strategies in public health; Microbially-based strategies to influence global processes
期刊最新文献
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