Role of nitric oxide in Salmonella typhimurium-mediated cancer cell killing
By: Yoram Barak , Frank Schreiber , Steve H Thorne , Christopher H Contag , Dirk deBeer and A Matin

BMC Cancer 2010, 10:146 doi:10.1186/1471-2407-10-146
Published: 17 April 2010

Abstract (Provisional)

Background

Bacterial targeting of tumours is an important anti-cancer strategy. We previously showed that strain SL7838 of Salmonella typhimurium targets and kills cancer cells. Whether NO generation by the bacteria has a role in SL7838 lethality to cancer cells is explored. This bacterium has the mechanism for generating NO, but also for decomposing it.

Results

SL7838 generated NO in anaerobic cell suspensions, inside infected cancer cells in vitro and in implanted 4T1 tumours in live mice, as measured using microsensors. Thus, under these conditions, the NO generating pathway is more active than the decomposition pathway. The latter was eliminated, in strain SL7842, by the deletion of hmp- and norV genes, making SL7842 more proficient at generating NO than SL7838. SL7842 killed cancer cells more effectively than SL7838 in vitro, and this was dependent on nitrate availability. This strain was also ca. 100% more effective in treating implanted 4T1 mouse tumours than SL7838.

Conclusions

NO generation capability is important in the killing of cancer cells by Salmonella strains.

The complete article is available as a provisional PDF. The fully formatted PDF and HTML versions are in production.






* Albert Einstein College of Medicine has been
awarded Acceditation with Commendation by
the ACCME

Copyright 2025 InterMDnet | Privacy Policy | Disclaimer | System Requirements