DnaK supports intracellular persistence of Staphylococcus xylosus and confers mechanical resilience to a human breast cancer cell line.
Intratumoral Staphylococcus xylosus enhances the ability of breast cancer cells to survive mechanical shear stress, a critical barrier encountered during hematogenous metastasis.
APA
Ye L, Yu G, et al. (2026). DnaK supports intracellular persistence of Staphylococcus xylosus and confers mechanical resilience to a human breast cancer cell line.. PloS one, 21(1), e0341069. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0341069
MLA
Ye L, et al.. "DnaK supports intracellular persistence of Staphylococcus xylosus and confers mechanical resilience to a human breast cancer cell line.." PloS one, vol. 21, no. 1, 2026, pp. e0341069.
PMID
41557710
Abstract
Intratumoral Staphylococcus xylosus enhances the ability of breast cancer cells to survive mechanical shear stress, a critical barrier encountered during hematogenous metastasis. However, the bacterial determinants underlying this effect remain unclear. Here, we identify the bacterial molecular chaperone DnaK as a key factor enabling S. xylosus to promote shear-stress tolerance in a human breast cancer cell line. Deletion of dnaK did not affect bacterial adhesion to or invasion of MDA-MB-231 cells but significantly reduced sustained intracellular survival. Under oxidative and acidic stress conditions, the ΔdnaK mutant showed reduced survival compared with the wild-type strain, and its ability to enhance tumor-cell viability under shear stress was markedly impaired. Using a breast cancer-on-a-chip microfluidic model, we demonstrate that infection with wild-type or complemented Staphylococcus xylosus confers increased tumor-cell viability under laminar shear stress in a time-dependent manner, whereas cells infected with the ΔdnaK mutant fail to acquire shear-stress resistance and resemble uninfected controls. Together, these findings establish DnaK-dependent intracellular persistence of S. xylosus as a critical determinant of tumor-cell survival under mechanical stress, linking a conserved bacterial stress-response protein to cancer cell biomechanics in a metastasis-relevant context.
MeSH Terms
Humans; Breast Neoplasms; Cell Line, Tumor; Staphylococcus; Female; Bacterial Proteins; Stress, Mechanical; Bacterial Adhesion; HSP70 Heat-Shock Proteins; Cell Survival; Oxidative Stress
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