| Literature DB >> 22462021 |
Arsenio M Fialho1, Prabhakar Salunkhe, Sunil Manna, Sidharth Mahali, Ananda M Chakrabarty.
Abstract
The current therapy for glioblastoma multiforme involves total surgical resection followed by combination of radiation therapy and temozolomide. Unfortunately, the efficacy for such current therapy is limited, and newer approaches are sorely needed to treat this deadly disease. We have recently described the isolation of bacterial proteins and peptides with anticancer activity. In phase I human clinical trials, one such peptide, p28, derived from a bacterial protein azurin, showed partial and complete regression of tumors in several patients among 15 advanced-stage cancer patients with refractory metastatic tumors where the tumors were no longer responsive to current conventional drugs. An azurin-like protein called Laz derived from Neisseria meningitides demonstrates efficient entry and high cytotoxicity towards glioblastoma cells. Laz differs from azurin in having an additional 39-amino-acid peptide called an H.8 epitope, which allows entry and high cytotoxicity towards glioblastoma cells. Since p28 has been shown to have very little toxicity and high anti-tumor activity in advanced-stage cancer patients, it will be worthwhile to explore the use of H.8-p28, H.8-azurin, and Laz in toxicity studies and glioblastoma therapy in preclinical and human clinical trials.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22462021 PMCID: PMC3302066 DOI: 10.5402/2012/642345
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ISRN Neurol ISSN: 2090-5505
Figure 1Occurrence of azurin-like proteins across a phylogenetic tree. By homology searches, azurin orthologous were found in a variety of bacterial species members of the gamma- and betaproteobacteria but absent from the other bacterial phyla and the Eukarya. Black and white boxes indicate presence and absence of azurin, respectively. The box with vertical bars indicates the existence of an azurin-like protein (termed Laz) in Neisseria species. Shown on the right are the schematic representations of the conserved core domain presented in azurin-like proteins (COX2 superfamily). The phylogenetic tree was drawn using STRING [26]. SP: signal peptide.
Figure 2(a) A multiple amino acid alignment of 9 representative bacterial azurins and 3 azurin-like proteins (Laz) from neisserial species. Identical residues (⋆), conservative amino acid substitutions (:), and semiconservative amino acid substitutions (.) are shown below the aligned sequences. Laz and azurins that were used included are the following: Laz from N. gonorrhoeae FA 1090 (YP_208090.1); H.8 outer-membrane lipoprotein from N. meningitidis WUE 2594 (CBY91147.1); azurin from N. lactamica ATCC 23970 (ZP_05986830.1); azurin from Bordetella pertussis Tohama I (NP_879636.1); azurin from Achromobacter xylosoxidans AXX-A (EGP47536.1); azurin from P. aeruginosa PAO1 (NP_253609.1); azurin from Pseudomonas syringae pv. glycinea str. race 4 (EGH06424.1); azurin from Achromobacter xylosoxidans (BAA33677.1); azurin from Burkholderia cepacia (AAP03090.1); azurin from Pseudomonas mendocina ymp (YP_001186158.1); azurin from Bordetella parapertussis 12822 (NP_885568.1) and azurin from Vibrio parahaemolyticus 10329 (EGF40167.1). The CLUSTAL X software [29] was used to generate this multiple sequence alignment. (b) A phylogenetic tree calculated from the alignment represented above in (a). Clustal X with neighbour-joining method [30] was used to construct the tree.
List of issued US patents on protein drugs azurin and Laz.
| Title | Inventors | Patent number | Date of issuance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cytotoxic factors for modulating cell death | Chakrabarty AM, Das Gupta TK, Punj V, Zaborina O | 7,084,105 | August 1, 2006 |
| Compositions and methods for treating HIV infection with cupredoxins and cytochrome c | Chakrabarty AM, Das Gupta TK, Yamada T, Chaudhari A, Fialho A, Hong CS | 7,301,010 | November 27, 2007 |
| Compositions and methods for treating malaria with cupredoxin and cytochrome | Chakrabarty AM, Das Gupta TK, Yamada T, Chaudhari A, Fialho A, Hong CS | 7,338,766 | March 04, 2008 |
| Compositions and methods for treating conditions related to ephrin signaling with cupredoxins | Chakrabarty AM, Das Gupta T, Yamada T, Chaudhari A, Fialho A, Zhu Y | 7,381,701 | June 03, 2008 |
| Cytotoxic factors for modulating cell death | Chakrabarty AM, Das Gupta TK, Punj V, Zaborina O, Hiraoka Y, Yamada T | 7,491,394 | February 17, 2009 |
| Compositions and methods for treating HIV infection with cupredoxin and cytochrome c | Chakrabarty AM, Das Gupta, T, Yamada, T, Chaudhari A, Fialho A, Hong CS | 7,511,117 | March 31, 2009 |
| Compositions and methods to control angiogenesis with cupredoxins | Mehta RR, Taylor BN, Yamada T, Beattie CW, Das Gupta TK, Chakrabarty AM | 7,556,810 | July 07, 2009 |
| Compositions and methods to prevent cancer with cupredoxins | Das Gupta TK, Chakrabarty AM | 7,618,939 | November 17, 2009 |
| Cupredoxin derived transport agents and methods of use thereof | Chakrabarty AM, Das Gupta T, Yamada T, Fialho A | 7,691,383 | April 06, 2010 |
| Compositions and methods for treating malaria with cupredoxin and cytochrome | Chakrabarty AM, Das Gupta T, Yamada T, Chaudhari A, Fialho A, Hong CS | 7,740,857 | June 22, 2010 |
| Transport agents for crossing the blood-brain barrier and into brain cancer cells, and methods of use thereof | Hong CS, Yamada T, Fialho A, Das Gupta TK, Chakrabarty AM | 7,807,183 | October 5, 2010 |
Figure 3Left row: structural depiction of azurin, Laz (with the H.8 epitope in the N-terminal), and azurin with the cloned H.8 epitope in its N-terminal. The area corresponding to the p28 peptide region is marked. Middle row: the entry of fluorescently labeled azurin, Laz, and H.8-azurin in breast cancer MCF-7 and glioblastoma LN-229 cells is shown. The red color reflects the Alexa-Fluor-568-conjugated protein while the blue color represents the nucleus stained with DAPI. Right row: cytotoxicity of azurin, H.8-azurin, and Laz at 3 different concentrations towards LN-229 glioblastoma cells. The detailed methodologies have been described by [28].
Figure 4Odyssey scanning of brains from mice previously injected peritoneally with green fluorescent IR-dye-conjugated Laz, H.8 azurin, and azurin (from P. aeruginosa). Individual mice were injected with individual fluorescent protein, and the mice were sacrificed after 24 hours to obtain the brains for Odyssey imaging.
Figure 5Cytotoxicity effect of AT-01 peptide and cisplatin at 1 μM on U87 human glioblastoma, A431 skin cancer, and HepG2 liver cancer cell lines. Cancer cells (1 × 104) were seeded, and after 24 hours the cells were treated separately with 1 μM concentration of AT-01 peptide and cisplatin as a positive control. The viability of the cells was estimated by using MTT assay on the basis of formazan formed, which was detected spectrophotometrically by measuring optical density at 595 nm at 24 hours, and % cell cytotoxicity was determined [28].