Lingxue Niu, Zhenqiang Deng, Yiyu Jin, Ningzi Guan, Haifeng Ye. Engineering oncolytic bacteria as precision cancer therapeutics: design principles, therapeutic strategies, and translational perspectives[J]. Protein&Cell.
Citation: Lingxue Niu, Zhenqiang Deng, Yiyu Jin, Ningzi Guan, Haifeng Ye. Engineering oncolytic bacteria as precision cancer therapeutics: design principles, therapeutic strategies, and translational perspectives[J]. Protein&Cell.

Engineering oncolytic bacteria as precision cancer therapeutics: design principles, therapeutic strategies, and translational perspectives

  • Engineered oncolytic bacteria are emerging as a versatile platform for precision cancer therapy, combining inherent tumor tropism, immunogenicity, and programmable gene control. Advances in synthetic biology now enable inducible and autonomous circuits that sense exogenous inputs (chemical signals or physical signals), bacterial self-cues (quorum sensing, bacterial invasion switches, or nitric oxide-responsive promoters), and tumor-specific pathophysiology (hypoxia, low pH, or lactate). These designs regulate colonization, lysis, and the spatiotemporally confined release of therapeutic payloads-such as cytokines, prodrug-converting enzymes, and antibody/nanobody fragments-thereby enhancing antitumor efficacy while limiting off-target toxicity. Beyond monotherapy, oncolytic bacteria integrate with complementary modalities-including immunecheckpoint blockade, adoptive cell therapies (CAR-T/NK), radiotherapy/chemotherapy, nanomedicine, and oncolytic viruses-to amplify immune activation and enable multimodal, synergistic regimens. Concurrently, biosensor modules transform bacterial chassis into programmable "microbial factories" that couple therapy with real-time imaging and adaptive responses within the tumor microenvironment. This review synthesizes design principles for bacterial gene regulation, surveys recent preclinical advances, and highlights emerging combination strategies, while outlining translational considerations for safety, manufacturability, and dosing, and patient selection. Together, these developments position engineered oncolytic bacteria as a promising route toward safe, effective, and ultimately personalized bacteria-based cancer therapeutics.
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