Gene Ther Mol Biol Vol 6, 195-200, 2001
Bifidobacterium longum as a gene delivery
system
for cancer gene therapy
Research
Article
Minoru Fujimori1,
Toshiyuki Nakamura1, Takayuki Sasaki1, Kazuyuki Yazawa1,
Jun Amano1, Yasunobu Kano3, Shun’ichiro Taniguchi2
1Department of Surgery
and 2Molecular Oncology and Angiology, Angio-Aging Research
Division, Center on Aging and Adaptation, Shinshu University School of
Medicine, 3-1-1 Asahi, Matsumoto, Japan
3Department of Molecular Genetics,
Institute of Molecular and Cellular Biology for Pharmaceutical Science, Kyoto
Pharmaceutical University, 1 Shichono-cho, Misasagi, Yamashina-ku, Kyoto, Japan
_________________________________________________________________________________________________
*Correspondence: Minoru Fujimori, M.D., Ph.D.;
Department of Surgery;Shinshu University School of Medicine; 3-1-1 Asahi,
Matsumoto 390-8621, Japan; Telephone: 81-263-37-2657; Fax: 81-263-37-2721;
e-mail address: minoru1@hsp.md.shinshu-u.ac.jp
Key
words: cancer, prodrug-enzyme therapy
Abbreviations:
5-fluorocytosine,
(5FC); 5-fluorouracil, (5FU)
Summary
A fundamental obstacle in cancer gene
therapy is the specific targeting of therapy directly to a solid tumor, and no
systemic delivery system yet exists. A strain of domestic bacteria, Bifidobacterium longum, which is
nonpathogenic and anaerobic, selectively localized to and proliferated in solid
tumors after systemic application. We propose a novel approach to cancer gene
therapy in which anaerobic bacteria of the genus Bifidobacterium longum (B.
longum) are used to achieve tumor specific gene delivery and prodrug-enzyme
therapy. This is the first demonstration that Bifidobacterium longum can be utilized as a specific gene delivery
vector for gene therapy on solid tumors.
I. Introduction
A
fundamental obstacle in cancer gene therapy is the specificity to a solid
tumor, and yet no systemic delivery system exists. Hypoxic or necrotic regions
are characteristic of solid tumors in many murine and human tumors, including
the majority of primary tumors of the breast, uterine cervix (Moulder et al,
1984). Hypoxic regions are characteristic of many solid tumors and gene therapy
that targets to hypoxic tumor cells is currently being investigated (Dachs et
al, 1997). Kimura and colleagues demonstrated that anaerobic bacteria of the
genus Bifidobacterium could
selectively germinate and grow in the hypoxic regions of solid tumors after
intravenous injection (Kimura et al, 1980). The genus Bifidobacterium is a Gram-positive anaerobe and is one of the
domestic, nonpathogenic bacteria found in the lower small intestine and large
intestine of humans and some other mammalian animals (Gorbach et al, 1967). We
propose a novel approach to cancer gene therapy in which anaerobic bacteria of
the genus Bifidobacterium longum (B. longum) are used to achieve tumor
specific gene delivery and prodrug-enzyme therapy.
II. Results
A. Selective growth of B. longum in tumor tissues
The number
of two kinds of B. longum organisms
per gram of various tissue at various time intervals after intravenous
administration of bacilli into mice bearing Lewis lung cancer. At 168 hour,
tumors had approximately sixty thousands bacilli per gram of tumor tissue
regardless of the bacterial strain. In contrast, the number of bacilli in
non-malignant tissues, such as the liver, spleen, kidney and lung, began to
decrease immediately after injection and were below detectable

Figure 1.
Organ distribution of B.longum 105-A
and 108-A after a single i.v. adminisyration of 5-6 x 106 viable
bacilli into Lewis lung cancer-bearig mice.

Figure 2.
Comparison of the number of genetically engineered B. longum 105-A in both tumor and normal tissues from rats after
168 hr injected of about 2x108 viable bacilli. After homogenization
of removed tumor and tissues, 100 ml samples were plated on each of the
dishes and cultivated for 3 days

Figure 3.
Molecular structure of pBLES100-S-eCD
levels after 168 hours with B. longum 105-A and after 96 hours with
108-A (Figure 1).
Colonies
were recognized on the agar plate inoculating the tumor tissue only. Same
result obtained DMBA induced mammary tumor of rats (Figure 2).
B. Prodrug-enzyme therapy using genetically engineered B.longum
B. longum is effective as hypoxic tumor specific vector, and it
seems to be able to utilize for prodrug-enzyme therapy. We chose to use the
combination of cytosine deaminase and 5-fluorocytosine (5FC) in initial studies
of the feasibility of this strategy. The cellular toxicities of 5FC are a
results of its deamination by the enzyme cytosine deaminase to give
5-fluorouracil (5FU). We constructed pBLES100-S-eCD that includes HU gene
promoter and cytosine deaminase gene in shuttle vector pBLES100. It has been
proven that HU gene that encodes histon like DNA binding protein highly express
in B. longum. Cytosine deaminase gene
was ligated with HU gene prompter, and inserted into pBLES100. Figure 3 is molecular structure of
pBLES100-S-eCD. B. longum were
cultured anaerobically, and expression of the cytosine deaminase was analyzed
by western blot method. Figure 4 is
western blot analyzation of cytosine deaminase. The lane in the left is
recombinant cytosine deaminase as positive control. The expression of cytosine
deaminase is recognized only in transfected B.
longum. 5-fluorocytosine (5FC) was added in the culture solution of wild
and transfected B. longum, the
5-fluorouracil (5FU) concentration was measured time-dependent. Figure 5 is time-dependent 5FU
concentration in the culture solution. In transfected B. longum, 5FU concentration rises with the passage of the time. It
was confirmed that produced cytosine deaminase had the enzyme activity.Wild
and transfected B. longum were
injected into the DMBA induced mammary tumor of rats directly. Figure 6 is intratumoral concentration
of 5FU. In transfected B. longum
injected group, 5FU concentration was significantly more high-dense compare
with control group. 55 days after injection of wild type B. longum, size of

Figure
4. Western blot
analyzation of cytosine deaminase. Lane 1, recombinant cytosine deaminase as
positive control; Lane 2,3,4,5, transfected B.
longum; Lane 6,7,8,9, wild type B.
longum

Figure
5. Time-dependent 5FU
concentration in the culture solution of wild and trasfected B. longum

Figure 6.
Intratumoral concentration of 5FU.
tumor
increased remarkably. In transfected B.
longum injected group, the tumor size decreased (Figure 7). Hematoxylin-eosin staining of the tumor in wild type B. longum injected group indicated that
tumor cells were viable and proliferated. In transfected B. longum injected group, there are fibrosis and cytoplasm contains
vacuoles and eosinophilic granules. Cancer cells tend to shrink away from
stroma (Figure 8).
III. Discussion
A
crucial difficulty for cancer gene therapy is the lack of specificity of
current delivery systems. In this report, we observed a distribution of viable
bacilli throughout the body, but after 96 to 168 hr they were detectable only
in the tumor tissue after i.v. inoculation of B. longum to tumor-bearing mice and DMBA-induced mammary carcinoma
in rats. It has been suggested that the only requirement for success of this
gene therapy strategy should be the presence of hypoxia in the treated tumors.
This gene delivery system is not only tumor specific, but also nontoxic. Some
investigators have described the availability of anaerobic bacteria such as
clostridia (Fox et al, 1996; Lemmon et al, 1997) or Salmonella (Low et al,
1999) as a gene delivery vectors, but the pathogenicity of these organisms in
humans likely precludes their use (Hone et al, 1992). Conversely,
Bifidobacterium strains constitute almost the entire flora of the stools of
breast-fed infants and are widely used for the preparation of fermented milk
products. The nonpathogenicity and importance of these microorganisms are now
generally acknowledged. To be able to exploit the potential of these organisms
for cancer gene therapy, detailed knowledge is required about such basic
biological phenomena as cellular metabolism, gene expression, protein secretion
and genetics.
However,
studies on Bifidobacterium at the molecular level are severely limited in the
absence of an efficient

Figure 7. Tumor of DMBA induced rat mammary
tumors. Left, Day0 and 55 days after injection of wild type B. longum; Right, Day0 and 55 days after
injection of transfected B. longum.

Figure
8. Hematoxylin-eosin
staining of DMBA induced mammary tumor. Left, Wild type B. longum injected; Right, Transfected B. longum injected group.
transformation
system. Recently, Matsumura and colleagues developed a system for convenient
and reproducible genetic transformation of B.
longum (Matsumura et al, 1997).
We
have demonstrated the tumor-specific germination of Bifidobacteria with
transfected B. longum. These results
strongly suggest that B. longum can
be utilized as a highly specific gene delivery vector for cancer therapy.
One
of the major limitations of conventional chemotherapy is the toxicity
associated with the lack of specificity of drugs for tumor cells over normal
tissues. We proposed a new approach involving the genetically engineered B. longum for prodrug-enzyme therapy to use the combination of cytosine
deaminase and 5-fluorocytosine (5FC).
In
summary, B. longum is accumulated in
the hypoxic tumor, and it is effective as novel gene delivery system.
Transfected B. longum by
pBLES100-S-eCD produced cytosine deaminase in the hypoxic tumor, and it was
confirmed to be effective for prodrug-enzyme therapy.
IV. Materials and
Methods
A. Animals
Male C57BL6 mice, 6 to 8 weeks old, and
female Sprague-Dawley rats ,6 weeks old were used in this study. As
transplanted tumors, Lewis lung cancer and B16-F10 melanoma were used in mouse
model. About 5 hundreds thousands tumor cells were inoculated into the right
thigh muscle of mice. The solid tumors were obtained two weeks after. As
autochthonous tumor, the rats were administered 10 mg of 7,12-dimethylbenz[a]anthracene
(DMBA) by intragastric gavage weekly for two weeks. At 23 weeks after the first
dose of DMBA, 89% rats developed mammary tumors.
B.
Bacteria
B.
longum 105-A and
108-A were anaerobically cultured and five to six millions bacilli were injected
intravenously.
C.
Selective growth of B.longum in tumor
tissues
Animals were injected B. longum into tail vein. This number
was generally five to six million bacilli per mouse, and two hundreds million
per rat. At 24, 48, 96, 168 hours after injection of B. longum, mice were killed. Tumor and normal tissues were excised
and homogenized thoroughly. The diluted tissue homogenates were cultured under
anaerobic conditions. On day 3 of culture, the number of colonies per dish was
determined.
D.
Prodrug-enzyme therapy using genetically engineered B.longum
pBLES100-S-eCD that includes HU gene
promoter and cytosine deaminase gene in shuttle vector pBLES100 was
constructed. It has been proven that HU gene that encodes histon like DNA
binding protein highly express in B.
longum. Cytosine deaminase gene was ligated with HU gene prompter, and
inserted into pBLES100. pBLES100-S-eCD were transfected directly into B. longum
105-A by electroporation.
Transfected B. longum were cultured
anaerobically, and expression of the cytosine deaminase was analyzed by western
blot method.
5FC was added in the culture solution,
and the 5FU) concentration was measured time-dependent. Add 5FC quantity was 25
mg per five to six millions bacilli.
Wild and transfected B. longum were injected into the DMBA
induced mammary tumor of rats directly. Both wild type and transfected B. longum injected group, rats were
administered 500 mg per day of 5FC by intragastric gavage. Intratumoral
concentration of 5FU was measured, and size of the tumor was compared wild type
B. longum injected group with
transfected group.
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Minoru
Fujimori, M. D., Ph. D.