作者
Yao Qi,Yue Qiu,Yuting Zhang,Liang Zhang,Hui Xiong,Jing Yao
摘要
Intratumoral bacteria, especially Gram-positive bacteria (G + ), have a unique bacterial niche in breast cancer that promoted tumor progression. However, the effects of G + have so far been overlooked, serving an “invisible driver” of breast cancer. Moreover, due to the altered biological structure of G + in tumor cells and the penetration barrier of antibiotics, the effect of antibiotic-mediated eradication of G + in tumors is limited. Here, to simultaneously inhibit intratumoral G + and tumor cells via ferroptosis therapy, an amorphous nano-assembly (DFTV) was constructed by assembling doxorubicin (DOX), tannic acid (TA), FeSO 4 , and vancomycin (Van). DFTV treatment effectively targets intratumoral G + , thereby inhibiting the growth of the breast tumor and postoperative recurrence by downregulating the expression of inflammatory cytokines, including interleukin-6 (IL-6), interleukin-1 β (IL-1 β ), and tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF- α ). Moreover, inhibiting intracellular G + also restrains the reorganization of F-actin to form pseudopodia, thereby impairing tumor cell motility and blocking metastasis. Collectively, DFTV improves the antitumor efficacy by targeting G + in breast tumors, offering novel insights into overcoming the limitations associated with the lack of intratumoral antibacterial therapy in clinical breast cancer treatment protocols. DFTV, a nano-assembly composed of doxorubicin, tannic acid, FeSO 4 , and vancomycin, hinders breast cancer proliferation and metastasis through gram-positive bacteria (G + ) removal.