Abstract

New anticancer agents are continually needed because cancerous cells continue to evolve resistance to the currently available chemotherapeutic agents. The aim of the present study was to screen, purify and characterize a hepatotoxic bacteriocin from Enterococcus species. The production of bacteriocin from the Enterococcus isolates was achieved based on their antibacterial activity against indicator reference strains. Enterococcus isolates showed a broad spectrum of antibacterial activity by forming inhibition zones with diameters ranged between 12 and 29 mm. The most potent bacteriocin producing strain was molecularly identified as Enterococcus thailandicus. The crude extracted bacteriocin was purified by cation exchange and size exclusion chromatography that resulted in 83 fractions. Among them, 18 factions were considered as bacteriocins based on their positive antibacterial effects. The anticancer effects of the purified bacteriocins were tested against HepG2 cell line. The most promising enterocin (LNS18) showed the highest anticancer effects against HepG2 cells (with 75.24% cellular inhibition percentages), with IC50 value 15.643 μM and without any significant cytotoxic effects on normal fibroblast cells (BJ ATCC® CRL-2522™). The mode of anticancer action of enterocin LNS18 against HepG2 cells could be explained by its efficacy to induce cellular ROS, decrease HepG2 CD markers and arrest cells in G0 phase. Amino acid sequence of enterocin LNS18 was determined and the deduced peptide of the structural gene showed 86 amino acids that shared 94.7% identity with enterocin NKR-5-3B from E. faecium. Enterocin LNS18 consisted of 6 α-helices; 5 circular and one linear. Model-template alignment constructed between enterocin LNS18 and NKR-5-3B revealed 95.31% identity. The predicted 3D homology model of LNS18, after circularization and release of 22 amino acids, showed the formation of a bond between Leu23 and Trp86 amino acid residues at the site of circularization. Furthermore, areas of positive charges were due to the presence of 6 lysine residues resulting in a net positive charge of +4 on the bacteriocin surface. Based on the above mentioned results, our characterized bacteriocin is a promising agent to target liver cancer without any significant toxic effects on normal cell lines.

Highlights

  • Cancer is a major non-communicable disease that leads to morbidity and mortality throughout the entire world (Ferlay et al, 2013)

  • Enterocin LNS18 was potent (IC50 = 15.643 μM) against HepG2 cells compared to bacteriocins reported in the literature

  • Our study addressed some of the mechanisms on which enterocin LNS18 was dependent on its cytotoxic action against liver cancer cells

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Summary

Introduction

Cancer is a major non-communicable disease that leads to morbidity and mortality throughout the entire world (Ferlay et al, 2013). It is defined as uncontrolled growth of cells that have escaped the equilibrium rates between cell division and cell death. The search for novel compounds or strategies with selective toxicity to cancer cells became an urgent necessity (Raguz and Yagüe, 2008). With the discovery of therapeutic peptides, scientists have turned their attention to the use of bacteriocins as a new therapeutic remedy against cancer (Kaur and Kaur, 2015)

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