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Gutiérrez Moraga, Ana
In vitro Cytotoxicity of the Antimicrobial Polypeptide Nisin on Blood Tumor Cells
2022, Salazar Aravena, Lorena, Rivas, Elizabeth, Pavón, Alequis, Wiese, Guillermo, Manzano, Camila, Orellana, Paz, Cortés-Cortés, Piedad, Gutierrez-Moraga, Ana, Corsini Acura, Gino
Bacteriocins are antimicrobial peptides of ribosomal synthesis secreted by bacteria. Among these, nisin stands out, which has potential uses in antibiotic therapies, as a food bio preservative and probiotics. Nisin has also been reported to have cytotoxicity on neoplastic cell lines, but there is little information on its effect on blood tumor cells. Due to the potential use that nisin presents, it is relevant to determine the toxicity it presents on tumor cell lines of the blood type. For this, hemolytic activity tests were carried out on human erythrocytes and toxicity on human peripheral blood mononuclear cells, determining that nisin does not have a toxic effect on this type of normal human blood cells. Cytotoxicity tests were also carried out with tumor cell lines (K562 and U937), to determine dose, exposure time and selectivity in the toxic effect of nisin on human tumor cells. These tests show that nisin shows cytotoxic activity on K562 and U937 cell lines at 72 h of exposure, at a concentration of 40 µg / mL, which corresponds to 100 times the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) used for its action on bacteria. When comparing the effect of nisin on human peripheral blood mononuclear cells with lymphoid and myeloid tumor lines (K562 and U937 respectively), a selective effect of nisin on blood tumor cells is observed. © 2022, Universidad de la Frontera. All rights reserved.
Identification of Antarctic Soil Bacteria Exhibiting Antiproliferative Activity Against a Colon Cancer Cell Line
2023, Pavón, Alequis, Corsini Acura, Gino, Orellana, Paz, Calisto, Nancy, Navarro, Laura, Wiese, Guillermo, Cortés-Cortés, Piedad, Gidekel, Manuel, Gutiérrez Moraga, Ana, Salazar, Lorena
Cancer is the second leading cause of death in the world and colorectal cancer is the only cancer that has shown a sustained increase in mortality in the last decade. In the search for new chemotherapeutic agents against cancer, extremophilic microorganisms have shown to be a potential source to obtain molecules of natural origin and with selective cytotoxic action towards cancer cells. In this work we analyzed the ability of a collection of Antarctic soil bacteria, isolated on Collins Glacier from the rhizosphere of Deschampsia antarctica Desv plant, to secrete molecules capable of inhibiting cell proliferation of a colorectal cancer tumor line. Our results demonstrated that culture supernatants from the Antarctic bacteria K2I17 and MI12 decreased the viability of LoVo cells, a colorectal adenocarcinoma cell line. Phenotypic and genotypic characterization of the Antarctic bacteria showed that they were taxonomically related and nucleotide identity analysis based on the 16S rRNA gene sequence identified the bacterium K2I17 as a species belonging to the genus Bacillus. © 2023, Universidad de la Frontera. All rights reserved.
Characterization of Antibiotic-Resistance Antarctic Pseudomonas That Produce Bacteriocin-like Compounds
2024, Calisto, Nancy, Navarro, Laura, Iribarren, Cristian, Orellana, Paz, Gómez, Claudio, Salazar, Lorena, Gutiérrez Moraga, Ana, Aranda, Carlos, González, Alex R., Tello, Mario, Cortés-Cortés, Piedad, Gidekel, Manuel, Corsini Acura, Gino
In this study, bacterial isolates C1-4-7, D2-4-6, and M1-4-11 from Antarctic soil were phenotypically and genotypically characterized, and their antibacterial spectrum and that of cell-free culture supernatant were investigated. Finally, the effect of temperature and culture medium on the production of antimicrobial compounds was investigated. The three bacteria were identified as different strains of the genus Pseudomonas. The three bacteria were multi-drug resistant to antibiotics. They exhibited different patterns of growth inhibition of pathogenic bacteria. M1-4-11 was remarkable for inhibiting the entire set of pathogenic bacteria tested. All three bacteria demonstrated optimal production of antimicrobial compounds at 15 °C and 18 °C. Among the culture media studied, Nutrient broth would be the most suitable to promote the production of antimicrobial compounds. The thermostability exhibited by the antimicrobial molecules secreted, their size of less than 10 kDa, and their protein nature would indicate that these molecules are bacteriocin-like compounds. © 2024 by the authors.