COSMOS magazine


Share |


News

This cancer cure will make you sick

Monday, 23 August 2010
Cosmos Online

Single page print view

Salmonella typhimurium

Color-enhanced scanning electron micrograph showing Salmonella typhimurium (red) invading cultured human cells.

Credit: Rocky Mountain Laboratories, NIAID, NIH

SYDNEY: Treating tumours with Salmonella bacteria induces an immune response that effectively kills cancer cells, Italian scientists announced.

This research could lead to that holy grail of modern medicine: a cure for cancer.

“We demonstrated that it is possible … to generate immunotherapy protocols that are effective in controlling the growth of established tumours or in vaccinating against tumours,” said co-author Maria Rescigno of the study published in Science Translational Medicine.

Invisible cancer cells

The body’s natural immune responses are often able to detect and destroy early cancer cells. But as tumour cells progress and proliferate, they can become invisible to immune cells.

Salmonella bacteria cause illnesses such as typhoid fever and the food-bourn disease salmonellosis. Since their discovery they have generally been reviled by humanity, but that may be about to change.

A team of Italian scientists have demonstrated that an injection of Salmonella bacteria into tumours can render them ‘visible’ again.

Vital role in immune detection

The findings may help scientists create tumour-killing immune cells for injection into patients, or might prove useful in developing a potential ‘vaccine’ against cancer.

Working under laboratory conditions, the scientists found that Salmonella-infected melanoma cells from both mice and humans increased the amount of connexin 43 in the cells.

Connexin 43 is a protein that plays a vital role in immune detection of cancer cells, and this new infusion of connexin 43 spread among the tumour cells, playing its part in ‘revealing’ them and provoking an immune response.

Killed off tumours in mice

The researchers wanted to find out whether this method would work in living animals. They treated cancerous mice with Salmonella and observed that just like isolated cells in the lab, the immune cells suddenly recognised and killed tumour cells in the mice.

This approach also protected mice from cancer spreading to other parts of the body – a vaccination-style preventative strategy.

Follow COSMOSmagazine on TwitterJoin COSMOSmagazine on Facebook