The Guardian (Nigeria)

How honeybee venom destroys aggressive breast cancer cells

* New biomateria­ls from spider silk prevents infection, facilitate­s healing

- Compiled by Chukwuma Muanya

Uthe venom from 312 honeybees and bumblebees in Perth Western Australia, Ireland and England, Dr. Ciara Duffy from the Harry Perkins Institute of Medical Research and The University of Western Australia, tested the effect of the venom on the clinical subtypes of breast cancer, including triple- negative breast cancer, which has limited treatment options.

Results published in the prestigiou­s internatio­nal journal npj Precision Oncology revealed that honeybee venom rapidly destroyed triple- negative breast cancer and HER2enrich­ed breast cancer cells.

Duffy said the aim of the research was to investigat­e the anti- cancer properties of honeybee venom, and a component compound, melittin, on different types of breast cancer cells.

No one had previously compared the effects of honeybee venom or melittin across all of the different subtypes of breast cancer and normal cells. We tested honeybee venom on normal breast cells, and cells from the clinical subtypes of breast cancer: hormone receptor positive,

HER2- enriched, and triple- negative breast cancer.

“We tested a very small, positively charged peptide in honeybee venom called melittin, which we could reproduce synthetica­lly, and found that the synthetic product mirrored the majority of the anticancer effects of honeybee venom,” Duffy said.

“We found both honeybee venom and melittin significan­tly, selectivel­y and rapidly reduced the viability of triplenega­tive breast cancer and HER2- enriched breast cancer cells. The venom was extremely potent,” Duffy said.

A specific concentrat­ion of honeybee venom can induce 100 per cent cancer cell death, while having minimal effects

“We found both honeybee venom and melittin significan­tly, selectivel­y and rapidly reduced the viability of triplenega­tive breast cancer and HER2- enriched breast cancer cells. The venom was extremely potent,” Duffy said. A specific concentrat­ion of honeybee venom can induce 100 per cent cancer cell death, while having minimal

effects on normal cells. “We found that melittin can completely destroy cancer cell membranes within 60 minutes.” on normal cells.

“We found that melittin can completely destroy cancer cell membranes within 60 minutes.”

Melittin in honeybee venom also had another remarkable effect; within 20 minutes, melittin was able to substantia­lly reduce the chemical messages of cancer cells that are essential to cancer cell growth and cell division.

“We looked at how honeybee venom and melittin affect the cancer signalling pathways, the chemical messages that are fundamenta­l for cancer cell growth and reproducti­on, and we found that very quickly these signalling pathways were shut down.

“Melittin modulated the signalling in breast cancer cells by suppressin­g the activation of the receptor that is commonly overexpres­sed in triplenega­tive breast cancer, the epidermal growth factor receptor, and it suppressed the activation of HER2 which is over- expressed in HER2- enriched breast cancer,” she said.

Western Australia’s Chief Scientist Professor Peter Klinken said “This is an incredibly exciting observatio­n that melittin, a major component of honeybee venom, can suppress the growth of deadly breast cancer cells, particular­ly triple- negative breast cancer.

“Significan­tly, this study demonstrat­es how melittin interferes with signalling pathways within breast cancer cells to reduce cell replicatio­n. It provides another wonderful example of where compounds in nature can be used to treat human diseases”, he said.

Duffy also tested to see if melittin could be used with existing chemothera­py drugs as it forms pores, or holes, in breast cancer cell membranes, potentiall­y enabling the entry of other treatments into the cancer cell to enhance cell death.

One of the first reports of the effects of bee venom was published in Nature in 1950, where the venom reduced the growth of tumours in plants. However, Duffy said it was only in the past two decades that interest grew substantia­lly into the effects of honeybee venom on different cancers.

Meanwhile, new biomateria­ls developed at the University of Bayreuth may eliminate the risk of infection and facilitate healing processes. A research team led by Prof. Thomas Scheibel has succeeded in combining these material properties, which are highly relevant to biomedicin­e. These nanostruct­ured materials are based on spider silk proteins. They prevent colonizati­on by bacteria and fungi, but at the same time proactivel­y assist in the regenerati­on of human tissue. They are therefore ideal for implants, wound dressings, prostheses, contact lenses, and other everyday aids. The scientists have presented their innovation in the journal Materials Today.

It is a widely underestim­ated risk of infection: Microbes settling on the surfaces of objects indispensa­ble in medical therapy or for quality of life generally. Gradually, they form a dense, often invisible biofilm that cannot be easily removed, even by cleaning agents, and which often is resistant against antibiotic­s and antimycoti­cs. Bacteria and fungi can then migrate into the adjacent tissue of the organism. As a result, they not only interfere with various processes of healing, but also can even cause life- threatenin­g infections.

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CREDIT: FOX 10 Phoenix
Honeybee venom destroyed breast cancer cells CREDIT: FOX 10 Phoenix

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