Alleviating Cancer Drug Toxicity by Inhibiting a Bacterial Enzyme
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill · Albert Einstein College of Medicine · +2 more institutions
Abstract
The dose-limiting side effect of the common colon cancer chemotherapeutic CPT-11 is severe diarrhea caused by symbiotic bacterial β-glucuronidases that reactivate the drug in the gut. We sought to target these enzymes without killing the commensal bacteria essential for human health. Potent bacterial β-glucuronidase inhibitors were identified by high-throughput screening and shown to have no effect on the orthologous mammalian enzyme. Crystal structures established that selectivity was based on a loop unique to bacterial β-glucuronidases. Inhibitors were highly effective against the enzyme target in living aerobic and anaerobic bacteria, but did not kill the bacteria or harm mammalian cells. Finally, oral…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 10.89
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 39
Authors
11Topics & keywords
- Enzyme
- Bacteria
- Toxicity
- Drug
- Microbiology
- Biology
- Anaerobic bacteria
- Pharmacology
- Good health and well-being