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Functional Assay for Measuring Bacterial Degradation of Gemcitabine Chemotherapy

Sayin, Serkan
Mitchell, Amir
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UMass Chan Affiliations
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Journal Article
Publication Date
2023-09-05
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Abstract

Drug biotransformation by the host microbiome can impact the therapeutic success of treatment. In the context of cancer, drug degradation can take place within the microenvironment of the targeted tumor by intratumor bacteria. In pancreatic cancer, increased chemo-resistance against the frontline chemotherapy gemcitabine is thought to arise from drug degradation by the tumor microbiome. This bacterial-drug interaction highlights the need for developing rapid assays for monitoring bacterial gemcitabine breakdown. While chemical approaches such as high-performance liquid chromatography are suitable for this task, they require specialized equipment and expertise and are limited in throughput. Functional cell-based assays represent an alternate approach for performing this task. We developed a functional assay to monitor the rate of bacterial gemcitabine breakdown using a highly sensitive bacterial reporter strain. Our method relies on standard laboratory equipment and can be implemented at high throughput to monitor drug breakdown by hundreds of strains simultaneously. This functional assay can be readily adapted to monitor degradation of other drugs. Key features Quantification of gemcitabine breakdown by incubating bacteria that degrades the drug and subsequently testing the growth of a reporter strain on filtered supernatant. Use of an optimized reporter strain that was genetically engineered to be a non-degrader strain and highly sensitive to gemcitabine. A high-throughput assay performed in microplates that can be adjusted for identifying bacteria with a fast or slow gemcitabine degradation rate. The assay results can be compared to results from a standard curve with known drug concentrations to quantify degradation rate.

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Sayin S, Mitchell A. Functional Assay for Measuring Bacterial Degradation of Gemcitabine Chemotherapy. Bio Protoc. 2023 Sep 5;13(17):e4797. doi: 10.21769/BioProtoc.4797. PMID: 37719072; PMCID: PMC10501921.

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DOI
10.21769/BioProtoc.4797
PubMed ID
37719072
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Copyright: © 2023 The Authors; exclusive licensee Bio-protocol LLC. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/).