Bacterial DnaK reduces the activity of anti-cancer drugs cisplatin and 5FU

Chemotherapy is a primary treatment for cancer, but its efficacy is often limited by cancer-associated bacteria (CAB) that impair tumor suppressor functions. Our previous research found that Mycoplasma fermentans DnaK, a chaperone protein, impairs p53 activities, which are essential for most anti-ca...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of translational medicine 2024-03, Vol.22 (1), p.269-15, Article 269
Hauptverfasser: Benedetti, Francesca, Mongodin, Emmanuel F, Badger, Jonathan H, Munawwar, Arshi, Cellini, Ashley, Yuan, Weirong, Silvestri, Giovannino, Kraus, Carl N, Marini, Simone, Rathinam, Chozha V, Salemi, Marco, Tettelin, Hervé, Gallo, Robert C, Zella, Davide
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Chemotherapy is a primary treatment for cancer, but its efficacy is often limited by cancer-associated bacteria (CAB) that impair tumor suppressor functions. Our previous research found that Mycoplasma fermentans DnaK, a chaperone protein, impairs p53 activities, which are essential for most anti-cancer chemotherapeutic responses. To investigate the role of DnaK in chemotherapy, we treated cancer cell lines with M. fermentans DnaK and then with commonly used p53-dependent anti-cancer drugs (cisplatin and 5FU). We evaluated the cells' survival in the presence or absence of a DnaK-binding peptide (ARV-1502). We also validated our findings using primary tumor cells from a novel DnaK knock-in mouse model. To provide a broader context for the clinical significance of these findings, we investigated human primary cancer sequencing datasets from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA). We identified F. nucleatum as a CAB carrying DnaK with an amino acid composition highly similar to M. fermentans DnaK. Therefore, we investigated the effect of F. nucleatum DnaK on the anti-cancer activity of cisplatin and 5FU. Our results show that both M. fermentans and F. nucleatum DnaKs reduce the effectiveness of cisplatin and 5FU. However, the use of ARV-1502 effectively restored the drugs' anti-cancer efficacy. Our findings offer a practical framework for designing and implementing novel personalized anti-cancer strategies by targeting specific bacterial DnaKs in patients with poor response to chemotherapy, underscoring the potential for microbiome-based personalized cancer therapies.
ISSN:1479-5876
1479-5876
DOI:10.1186/s12967-024-05078-x