Programming the lifestyles of engineered bacteria for cancer therapy

Author:

Fu Shengwei1,Zhang Rongrong2,Gao Yanmei1,Xiong Jiarui1,Li Ye2,Pu Lu3,Xia Aiguo2,Jin Fan12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Hefei National Research Center for Physical Sciences at the Microscale; Department of Polymer Science and Engineering, University of Science and Technology of China , Hefei 230026 , China

2. CAS Key Laboratory of Quantitative Engineering Biology, Shenzhen Institute of Synthetic Biology, Shenzhen Institutes of Advanced Technology, Chinese Academy of Sciences , Shenzhen 518055 , China

3. West China School of Medicine; West China Hospital of Sichuan University , Chengdu 610065 , China

Abstract

ABSTRACT Bacteria can be genetically engineered to act as therapeutic delivery vehicles in the treatment of tumors, killing cancer cells or activating the immune system. This is known as bacteria-mediated cancer therapy (BMCT). Tumor invasion, colonization and tumor regression are major biological events, which are directly associated with antitumor effects and are uncontrollable due to the influence of tumor microenvironments during the BMCT process. Here, we developed a genetic circuit for dynamically programming bacterial lifestyles (planktonic, biofilm or lysis), to precisely manipulate the process of bacterial adhesion, colonization and drug release in the BMCT process, via hierarchical modulation of the lighting power density of near-infrared (NIR) light. The deep tissue penetration of NIR offers us a modality for spatio-temporal and non-invasive control of bacterial genetic circuits in vivo. By combining computational modeling with a high-throughput characterization device, we optimized the genetic circuits in engineered bacteria to program the process of bacterial lifestyle transitions by altering the illumination scheme of NIR. Our results showed that programming intratumoral bacterial lifestyle transitions allows precise control of multiple key steps throughout the BMCT process and therapeutic efficacy can be greatly improved by controlling the localization and dosage of therapeutic agents via optimizing the illumination scheme.

Funder

National Key Research and Development Program of China

National Natural Science Foundation of China

China Postdoctoral Science Foundation

Chinese Academy of Sciences

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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