Motility is critical for effective distribution and accumulation of bacteria in tumor tissue
Motile bacteria can overcome the penetration limitations of cancer chemotherapeutics because they can actively migrate into solid tumors. Although several genera of bacteria have been shown to accumulate preferentially in tumors, the spatiotemporal dynamics of bacterial tumor colonization and their...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Integrative biology (Cambridge) 2012-02, Vol.4 (2), p.165-176 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Motile bacteria can overcome the penetration limitations of cancer chemotherapeutics because they can actively migrate into solid tumors. Although several genera of bacteria have been shown to accumulate preferentially in tumors, the spatiotemporal dynamics of bacterial tumor colonization and their dependence on bacterial motility are not clear. For effective tumor regression, bacteria must penetrate and distribute uniformly throughout tumors. To measure these dynamics, we used an
in vitro
model of continuously perfused tumor tissue to mimic the delivery and systemic clearance of
Salmonella typhimurium
strains SL1344 and VNP20009, and
Escherichia coli
strains K12 and DH5. Tissues were treated for 1 hour with 10
5
or 10
7
CFU ml
1
suspensions of each strain and the location and extent of bacterial accumulation were observed for 30 hours.
Salmonella
had 14.5 times greater average swimming speed than
E. coli
and colonized tissues at 100 times lower doses than
E. coli
. Bacterial motility strongly correlated (
R
2
= 99.3%) with the extent of tissue accumulation. When inoculated at 10
5
CFU ml
1
, motile
Salmonella
formed colonies denser than 10
10
CFU/(g-tissue) and less motile
E. coli
showed no detectable colonization. Based on spatiotemporal profiles and a mathematical model of motility and growth, bacterial dispersion was found to be necessary for deep penetration into tissue. Bacterial colonization caused apoptosis in tumors and apoptosis levels correlated (
R
2
= 98.6%) with colonization density. These results show that motility is critical for effective distribution of bacteria in tumors and is essential for designing cancer therapies that can overcome the barrier of limited tumor penetration.
Motility is critical for effective penetration of bacteria into tumors, as shown by a microfluidic tumor tissue model. |
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ISSN: | 1757-9694 1757-9708 1757-9708 |
DOI: | 10.1039/c2ib00091a |