Bacterial infection-mediated anticancer activity (BIMAc) - Revisiting the molecular mechanisms

被引:3
|
作者
Ramasamy, Soundhar [1 ]
Nattarayan, Vasugi [1 ]
Jayaraj, Gopal Gunanathan [1 ]
Arulanandh, Mary Diana [1 ]
Jaiswal, Alok [1 ]
机构
[1] Inst Genom & Integrat Biol, New Delhi 110007, India
来源
关键词
Cancer; Pathogen; Cyclomodulins; Centrosome; Anticancer;
D O I
10.1016/j.jmhi.2012.03.009
中图分类号
R-3 [医学研究方法]; R3 [基础医学];
学科分类号
1001 ;
摘要
The anticancer activity demonstrated by genetically attenuated invasive Shigella flexneri contradicts the long-held understanding of bacterial infection-mediated anticancer activity (BIMAc), as a 'by-stander effect' caused by an immune response against any invading pathogen as a reason for tumour regression. Similarly, the selective tumouricidal effect by Salmonella A1 auxotrophic mutant in nude mice is another observation where the current theory fails. Considering these flaws, we set to re-examine the mechanisms behind BIMAc independent of immune response, on the basis of molecular understanding about the initial colonisation of gut epithelium by S. flexneri and its production of cell-cycle-inhibiting proteins called cyclomodulins. During infection, S. flexneri injects OspE effector protein into the gut epithelium. The resulting interaction of OspE with ILK prevents epithelial cell exfoliation and facilitates the pathogen's colonisation of the gut. This interaction is also shown to enhance membrane retention of ILK in these infected cells. Correspondingly, another study reports the indispensable role of ILK in survival of cancer cells with supernumerary centrosomes by localising it to the centrosomes and clustering them into a bipolar spindle. Knockdown of ILK in these cells leads to apoptosis due to multipolar mitosis. From these cumulative facts we hypothesised that enhanced membrane retention of ILK in Shigella-infected cancer cells prevents localisation of ILK to centrosomes and provokes multipolar mitosis and therefore cell death in cancer subpopulations with supernumerary centrosomes. This interaction may also be metastasis suppressive, because of its inhibitory effect on the focal adhesion turnover of gut epithelium, which is quintessential for any form of cell migration. Apart from these, Shigella also encodes potent cell-cycle-inhibiting effector molecules such as cyclomodulins. The additive action of these cyclomodulins along with the OspE-ILK interaction may be considered as the reason behind the anticancer activity mediated by Shigella infection. (C) 2012 Tehran University of Medical Sciences. Published by Elsevier Ltd. Open access under CC BY-NC-ND license.
引用
收藏
页码:19 / 22
页数:4
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Molecular Mechanisms Underlying Chemopreventive Anticancer Activity of Stevioside on Human Prostate Cancer Cell Line in vitro
    Raj, Preethi
    Priyadharshini, R.
    Jayaraman, Selvaraj
    Sinduja, Palati
    CLINICAL CANCER INVESTIGATION JOURNAL, 2023, 12 (02): : 8 - 11
  • [42] Evaluation of In Vitro Biological Activity of Flavanone/Chromanone Derivatives: Molecular Analysis of Anticancer Mechanisms in Colorectal Cancer
    Hikisz, Pawel
    Wawrzyniak, Piotr
    Adamus-Grabicka, Angelika A.
    Jacenik, Damian
    Budzisz, Elzbieta
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR SCIENCES, 2024, 25 (23)
  • [43] Bacterial Natural Disaccharide (Trehalose Tetraester): Molecular Modeling and in Vitro Study of Anticancer Activity on Breast Cancer Cells
    Nikolova, Biliana
    Antov, Georgi
    Semkova, Severina
    Tsoneva, Iana
    Christova, Nelly
    Nacheva, Lilyana
    Kardaleva, Proletina
    Angelova, Silvia
    Stoineva, Ivanka
    Ivanova, Juliana
    Vasileva, Ivanina
    Kabaivanova, Lyudmila
    POLYMERS, 2020, 12 (02)
  • [44] Molecular mechanisms of S. aureus mediated endovascular infection under fluid shear conditions
    McDonnell, C.
    McLoughlin, A.
    Cummins, P. M.
    Kerrigan, S. W.
    JOURNAL OF THROMBOSIS AND HAEMOSTASIS, 2013, 11 : 784 - 784
  • [45] Molecular mechanisms of the antibacterial activity of polyimide fibers in a skin-wound model with Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacterial infection in vivo
    Yang, Xia
    Ma, Wei
    Lin, Hua
    Ao, Shengxiang
    Liu, Haoru
    Zhang, Hao
    Tang, Wanqi
    Xiao, Hongyan
    Wang, Fangjie
    Zhu, Junyu
    Liu, Daoyan
    Lin, Shujun
    Zhang, Ying
    Zhou, Zhongfu
    Chen, Changbin
    Liang, Huaping
    NANOSCALE ADVANCES, 2022, 4 (14): : 3043 - 3053
  • [46] Experimental Therapy of Ovarian Cancer with Synthetic Makaluvamine Analog: In Vitro and In Vivo Anticancer Activity and Molecular Mechanisms of Action
    Chen, Tao
    Xu, Yi
    Guo, He
    Liu, Yanling
    Hu, Pingting
    Yang, Xinying
    Li, Xiaoguang
    Ge, Shichao
    Velu, Sadanandan E.
    Nadkarni, Dwayaja H.
    Wang, Wei
    Zhang, Ruiwen
    Wang, Hui
    PLOS ONE, 2011, 6 (06):
  • [47] Molecular Mechanisms of Anticancer Activity of N-Glycosides of Indolocarbazoles LCS-1208 and LCS-1269
    Zenkov, Roman G.
    Vlasova, Olga A.
    Maksimova, Varvara P.
    Fetisov, Timur I.
    Karpechenko, Natalia Y.
    Ektova, Lidiya V.
    Eremina, Vera A.
    Popova, Valeriia G.
    Usalka, Olga G.
    Lesovaya, Ekaterina A.
    Belitsky, Gennady A.
    Yakubovskaya, Marianna G.
    Kirsanov, Kirill I.
    MOLECULES, 2021, 26 (23):
  • [48] Molecular mechanisms of the biological activity of the anticancer drug elesclomol and its complexes with Cu(II), Ni(II) and Pt(II)
    Yadav, Arun A.
    Patel, Daywin
    Wu, Xing
    Hasinoff, Brian B.
    JOURNAL OF INORGANIC BIOCHEMISTRY, 2013, 126 : 1 - 6
  • [49] Anticancer activity and molecular mechanisms of α-conidendrin, a polyphenolic compound present in Taxus yunnanensis, on human breast cancer cell lines
    Hafezi, Katayoon
    Hemmati, Ali Asghar
    Abbaszadeh, Hassan
    Valizadeh, Armita
    Makvandi, Manoochehr
    PHYTOTHERAPY RESEARCH, 2020, 34 (06) : 1397 - 1408
  • [50] Molecular Mechanisms of Parthenolide-Mediated Pro-Apoptotic Activity in Acute Myeloid Leukemia Cells
    Minhajuddin, Mohammad
    Pei, Shanshan
    Ashton, John M.
    Callahan, Kevin
    Lagadinou, Eleni
    Balys, Marlene
    Corbett, Cheryl
    Neering, Sarah
    Rossi, Randall M.
    Jordan, Craig T.
    BLOOD, 2011, 118 (21) : 1056 - 1056