Bacterial Iron Siderophore Drives Tumor Survival and Ferroptosis Resistance in a Biofilm-Tumor Spheroid Coculture Model

被引:1
|
作者
Yeung, Yoyo Wing Suet [1 ]
Ma, Yeping [1 ]
Deng, Yanlin [2 ]
Khoo, Bee Luan [2 ,3 ,4 ]
Chua, Song Lin [1 ,5 ,6 ]
机构
[1] Hong Kong Polytech Univ, Dept Appl Biol & Chem Technol, Kowloon, Hong Kong 999077, Peoples R China
[2] City Univ Hong Kong, Dept Biomed Engn, Hong Kong 999077, Peoples R China
[3] Hong Kong Ctr Cerebro Cardiovasc Hlth Engn COCHE, Hong Kong 999077, Peoples R China
[4] City Univ Hong Kong, Shenzhen Futian Res Inst, Shenzhen 518000, Peoples R China
[5] Hong Kong Polytech Univ, State Key Lab Chem Biol & Drug Discovery, Kowloon, Hong Kong 999077, Peoples R China
[6] Hong Kong Polytech Univ, Res Ctr Deep Space Explorat RCDSE, Kowloon, Hong Kong 999077, Peoples R China
关键词
biofilm; ferroptosis; Pseudomonas aeruginosa; pyoverdine; tumor microenvironment; CANCER-CELLS; LUNG-CANCER; COLONIZATION; MICROBIOME;
D O I
10.1002/advs.202404467
中图分类号
O6 [化学];
学科分类号
0703 ;
摘要
Interactions between tumoral cells and tumor-associated bacteria within the tumor microenvironment play a significant role in tumor survival and progression, potentially impacting cancer treatment outcomes. In lung cancer patients, the Gram-negative pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa raises questions about its role in tumor survival. Here, a microfluidic-based 3D-human lung tumor spheroid-P. aeruginosa model is developed to study the bacteria's impact on tumor survival. P. aeruginosa forms a tumor-associated biofilm by producing Psl exopolysaccharide and secreting iron-scavenging pyoverdine, which is critical for establishing a bacterial community in tumors. Consequently, pyoverdine promotes cancer progression by reducing susceptibility to iron-induced death (ferroptosis), enhancing cell viability, and facilitating several cancer hallmarks, including epithelial-mesenchymal transition and metastasis. A promising combinatorial therapy approach using antimicrobial tobramycin, ferroptosis-inducing thiostrepton, and anti-cancer doxorubicin could eradicate biofilms and tumors. This work unveils a novel phenomenon of cross-kingdom cooperation, where bacteria protect tumors from death, and it paves the way for future research in developing antibiofilm cancer therapies. Understanding these interactions offers potential new strategies for combatting cancer and enhancing treatment efficacy.
引用
收藏
页数:13
相关论文
共 9 条
  • [1] Malignant Melanoma Cells Assemble a Tumor Biofilm that Promotes Survival and Resistance in Response to External Stresses
    Afasizheva, Anna
    Kotobuki, Yorihisa
    Tillman, Heather
    Vieira, Wilfred
    Fung, King Leung
    Chen, Emily
    Tanner, Kandice
    BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 2015, 108 (02) : 305A - 305A
  • [2] Tumor-targeted bacterial nanocells carrying a super-cytotoxic drug elicit an anti-tumor immune response, long-term survival, prolonged tumor remission, and resistance to tumor re-challenge
    Brahmbhatt, Himanshu
    JOURNAL FOR IMMUNOTHERAPY OF CANCER, 2019, 7
  • [3] Spheroid culture of head and neck cancer cells as a model for circulating tumor cells reveals an important role of EGFR signaling in CTC survival
    Saki, M.
    Ozturk, M.
    Niehr, F.
    Konschak, R.
    Budach, V
    Tinhofer, I
    ONCOLOGY RESEARCH AND TREATMENT, 2014, 37 : 267 - 267
  • [4] Sustained delivery of low-dose anti-CTLA-4 by genetically engineered encapsulated cells to the tumor microenvironment drives tumor response and prolongs survival in a colorectal cancer model
    Grogg, Julien
    Charrier, Emily
    Vernet, Remi
    Urwyler, Muriel
    Von Rohr, Olivier
    Saingier, Valentin
    Courtout, Fabien
    Lathuiliere, Aurelien
    Engel, Adrien
    Mach, Nicolas
    CANCER RESEARCH, 2023, 83 (07)
  • [5] MiR-155 Inhibitor-Laden Exosomes Reverse Resistance to Cisplatin in a 3D Tumor Spheroid and Xenograft Model of Oral Cancer
    Sayyed, Adil Ali
    Gondaliya, Piyush
    Mali, Mukund
    Pawar, Abhijeet
    Bhat, Palak
    Khairnar, Amit
    Arya, Neha
    Kalia, Kiran
    MOLECULAR PHARMACEUTICS, 2021, 18 (08) : 3010 - 3025
  • [6] GROWTH DELAY AND SURVIVAL AFTER SINGLE AND SPLIT DOSE X-RAY TREATMENTS USING THE 9L BRAIN-TUMOR SPHEROID MODEL
    JOSTES, R
    BARCELLOSHOFF, MH
    WILLIAMS, ME
    DEEN, DF
    STRAHLENTHERAPIE, 1984, 160 (01) : 63 - 63
  • [7] Loss of p53 and mutational heterogeneity drives immune resistance in an autochthonous mouse lung cancer model with high tumor mutational burden
    Zhu, Mingrui
    Kim, Jiwoong
    Deng, Qing
    Ricciuti, Biagio
    Alessi, Joao V.
    Eglenen-Polat, Buse
    Bender, Matthew E.
    Huang, Hai-Cheng
    Kowash, Ryan R.
    Cuevas, Ileana
    Bennett, Zachary T.
    Gao, Jinming
    Minna, John D.
    Castrillon, Diego H.
    Awad, Mark M.
    Xu, Lin
    Akbay, Esra A.
    CANCER CELL, 2023, 41 (10) : 1731 - +
  • [8] TUMOR CELL- INTRINSIC EXPRESSION OF FGFR3 DRIVES ANTI-PDL-1 IMMUNOTHERAPY RESISTANCE IN A MURINE BLADDER CANCER MODEL
    Fleming-Trujillo, Erica
    Bloodworth, Jeffrey
    Fernald, Anthony
    Ramsland, Aubrianna
    Gajewski, Thomas
    Sweis, Randy
    JOURNAL FOR IMMUNOTHERAPY OF CANCER, 2021, 9 : A319 - A319
  • [9] A HETEROCELLULAR 3D SPHEROID MODEL REVEALS THE ROLE OF ENDOTHELIAL-SPECIFIC JAGGED-1 IN SINGLE OR COMBINED CHEMOTHERAPY RESISTANCE INDUCED BY TUMOR-ENDOTHELIUM INTERACTIONS
    Pasquier, J.
    Vidal, F.
    Hoarau-Vechot, J.
    Abu-Kaoud, N.
    Al Thawadi, H.
    Rafii, S.
    Rafii, A.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF GYNECOLOGICAL CANCER, 2015, 25 (09) : 1467 - 1467