Guest guest Posted November 5, 2002 Report Share Posted November 5, 2002 Bacteria protein kills cancer cells BYLINE: By MARCELLA S. KREITER Researchers at the University of Illinois at Chicago reported Tuesday they have found a protein produced by bacteria that kills cancer cells in mice. In research published in the Oct. 29 issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the researchers said they took bacteria that causes serious respiratory problems in human patients with cystic fibrosis and burn injuries and used it to kill human melanoma cells that had been implanted in specially bred mice. The bacteria produce a protein called azurin that actually unites with the natural cancer-suppressing protein p53 to stabilize the latter and increase its activity, said Ananda Chakrabarty, professor of microbiology and immunology. " It's been known for a long time that when people get infected, their tumors regress, " Chakrabarty said. " The problem is that the infection can't be allowed to go on. It will kill them. When drugs are used to remove the infection, the tumor will come back. It is generally believed such regression of tumors is due to activation of immune system. " By using only the azurin protein molecule rather than the whole bacterium, however, the effects of infection are eliminated and only the cancer-fighting properties are left. For their study, the investigators used the bacterium Pseudomonas aeruginosa, which is known to be resistant to antibiotics. It protects itself from destruction by killing macrophages, the cells representing the immune system's first line of attack against a foreign body. They implanted human melanoma cells into specially bred immunodeficient mice and injected the tumors with azurin, purified from P. aeruginosa. Chakrabarty said the azurin enhances p53's ability to make cancer cells die. After 22 days, the tumors had shrunk by an average of 60 percent. If the experiment had been allowed to continue, Chakrabarty explained, the tumors likely would have been eliminated altogether. He said the researchers also tested azurin on breast cancer cells and achieved a 50 percent reduction in tumors in a similar timeframe. Tests also were conducted on colon and lung cancer cells, with some success. Azurin is not the only bacteria-produced protein under study, Chakrabarty said, and it is possible a combination of such proteins or a combination of proteins and chemotherapy drugs could result in a new and effective weapon against cancer. " This kind of protein is produced by many bacteria, " he said. Bacteria first were observed as a cancer-fighting agent in 1893 by a New York doctor treating bone cancer patients. Dr. Coley noticed patients who contracted bacterial infections survived longer. More recent, researchers at s Hopkins University used bacteria that survive without oxygen to destroy the hard cores of tumors where radiation and chemotherapy had proven ineffective. However, the mice in those experiments died, either from the toxicity of the bacteria or because of something released by the dying cancer cells. " Our research suggests we can achieve a therapeutic outcome using bacterial proteins, without toxicity associated with live bacteria, " Chakrabarty said. " We are hopeful a variety of other human cancers might also be susceptible to the anti-cancer activity of this protein. " Phase 1 tests in humans still are at least two years off, however, and if such tests prove effective and non-toxic, further testing is at least three years off, he said. Dr. Inder Verma, a professor in laboratory of genetics at the Salk Institute in San Diego, called the findings interesting but noted numerous questions still need to be answered, including how the protein would be delivered to cancer cells within the body. " You can't inject each tumor cell with the protein, " Verma told UPI. " The idea is there. The question is how you deliver this gene product into the cell because the cells that do not get it will not die. ... If one cell does not die, the cancer will come back. " The other question, he said, is what happens to cancer cells in which the p53 protein already has mutated. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.