Literature DB >> 23812212

Targeting cancer with a bi-functional peptide: in vitro and in vivo results.

Karoline Meschenmoser1, Young Kim, Sebastian Franken, Michael Nowak, Georg Feldmann, Gerd Bendas, Matthias Wolfgarten, Davorka Messmer, Ingo G H Schmidt-Wolf.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Current therapies to treat cancer, although successful for some patients, have significant side-effects and a high number of patients have disease that is either non-responsive or which develops resistance. Our goal was to design a small peptide that possesses similar functions to an antibody drug conjugate with regard to targeting and killing cancer cells, but that overcomes size restrictions.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: We designed a novel cancer-specific killer peptide created by fusion of the toxic peptide (KLAKLAK)2 with the cancer recognition peptide LTVSPWY.
RESULTS: This bi-functional peptide showed toxicity to breast cancer, prostate cancer, and neuroblastoma cell lines. Only low toxicity to non-cancer cells, colon cancer, lung cancer, and lymphoma cell lines was observed. In vivo injections of the bi-functional peptide caused tumor growth retardation compared to mice treated with control peptides. The bi-functional peptide caused retardation of MDA-MB-435S tumors in vivo and increased survival to 80% at day 100 after tumor implantation, whereas all control animals died at day 70. Previous reports showed that the recognition moiety LTVSPWY targets the tumor-associated antigen HER2. Here we found that our new peptide TP-Tox also excerts toxic effects on HER2-negative cell lines. Therefore, we searched for the molecular target of the bi-specific peptide using immunoprecipitation and mass spectrometry. Our data suggest a possible interaction with RAS GTPase-activating protein binding protein 1 (G3BP1).
CONCLUSION: We designed a bi-functional peptide of 23 amino acids and demonstrated its ability to bind and kill several cancer cell lines in vitro and to strongly increase survival in breast cancer bearing mice in vivo. This novel toxin could be used in future cancer therapies and warrants further pre-clinical and clinical exploration.

Entities:  

Keywords:  G3BP1; Targeting cancer; peptide; toxin

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23812212

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  In Vivo        ISSN: 0258-851X            Impact factor:   2.155


  3 in total

1.  Crystal structure of a dimerization domain of human Caprin-1: insights into the assembly of an evolutionarily conserved ribonucleoprotein complex consisting of Caprin-1, FMRP and G3BP1.

Authors:  Yuhong Wu; Jiang Zhu; Xiaolan Huang; Zhihua Du
Journal:  Acta Crystallogr D Struct Biol       Date:  2016-05-25       Impact factor: 7.652

Review 2.  Histological outcomes after focal high-intensity focused ultrasound and cryotherapy.

Authors:  Taimur T Shah; Veeru Kasivisvanathan; Charles Jameson; Alex Freeman; Mark Emberton; Hashim U Ahmed
Journal:  World J Urol       Date:  2015-05-06       Impact factor: 4.226

3.  The CNGRC-GG-D(KLAKLAK)2 peptide induces a caspase-independent, Ca2+-dependent death in human leukemic myeloid cells by targeting surface aminopeptidase N/CD13.

Authors:  Sandrine Bouchet; Ruoping Tang; Fanny Fava; Ollivier Legrand; Brigitte Bauvois
Journal:  Oncotarget       Date:  2016-04-12
  3 in total

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