Jie Zhou1, Xuewen Du1, Natsuko Yamagata1, Bing Xu1. 1. Department of Chemistry, Brandeis University , 415 South Street, Waltham, Massachusetts 02453, United States.
Abstract
Selective inhibition of cancer cells remains a challenge in chemotherapy. Here we report the molecular and cellular validation of enzyme-instructed self-assembly (EISA) as a multiple step process for selectively killing cancer cells that overexpress alkaline phosphatases (ALPs). We design and synthesize two kinds of D-tetrapeptide containing one or two phosphotyrosine residues and with the N-terminal capped by a naphthyl group. Upon enzymatic dephosphorylation, these D-tetrapeptides turn into self-assembling molecules to form nanofibers in water. Incubating these D-tetrapeptides with several cancer cell lines and one normal cell line, the unphosphorylated D-tetrapeptides are innocuous to all the cell lines, the mono- and diphosphorylated D-tetrapeptides selectively inhibit the cancer cells, but not the normal cell. The monophosphorylated D-tetrapeptides exhibit more potent inhibitory activity than the diphosphorylated D-tetrapeptides do; the cancer cell lines express higher level of ALPs are more susceptible to inhibition by the phosphorylated D-tetrapeptides; the precursors of D-tetrapeptides that possess higher self-assembling abilities exhibit higher inhibitory activities. These results confirm the important role of enzymatic reaction and self-assembly. Using uncompetitive inhibitors of ALPs and fluorescent D-tetrapeptides, we delineate that the enzyme catalyzed dephosphorylation and the self-assembly steps, together, result in the localization of the nanofibers of D-tetrapeptides for killing the cancer cells. We find that the cell death modality likely associates with the cell type and prove the interactions between nanofibers and the death receptors. This work illustrates a paradigm-shifting and biomimetic approach and contributes useful molecular insights for the development of spatiotemporal defined supramolecular processes/assemblies as potential anticancer therapeutics.
Selective inhibition of cancer cells remains a challenge in chemotherapy. Here we report the molecular and cellular validation of enzyme-instructed self-assembly (EISA) as a multiple step process for selectively killing cancer cells that overexpress alkaline phosphatases (ALPs). We design and synthesize two kinds of D-tetrapeptide containing one or two phosphotyrosine residues and with the N-terminal capped by a naphthyl group. Upon enzymatic dephosphorylation, these D-tetrapeptides turn into self-assembling molecules to form nanofibers in water. Incubating these D-tetrapeptides with several cancer cell lines and one normal cell line, the unphosphorylated D-tetrapeptides are innocuous to all the cell lines, the mono- and diphosphorylated D-tetrapeptides selectively inhibit the cancer cells, but not the normal cell. The monophosphorylated D-tetrapeptides exhibit more potent inhibitory activity than the diphosphorylated D-tetrapeptides do; the cancer cell lines express higher level of ALPs are more susceptible to inhibition by the phosphorylated D-tetrapeptides; the precursors of D-tetrapeptides that possess higher self-assembling abilities exhibit higher inhibitory activities. These results confirm the important role of enzymatic reaction and self-assembly. Using uncompetitive inhibitors of ALPs and fluorescent D-tetrapeptides, we delineate that the enzyme catalyzed dephosphorylation and the self-assembly steps, together, result in the localization of the nanofibers of D-tetrapeptides for killing the cancer cells. We find that the cell death modality likely associates with the cell type and prove the interactions between nanofibers and the death receptors. This work illustrates a paradigm-shifting and biomimetic approach and contributes useful molecular insights for the development of spatiotemporal defined supramolecular processes/assemblies as potential anticancer therapeutics.
Being a ubiquitous
process used by cells, self-assembly (or aggregation,
or clustering) to form oligomeric or supramolecular protein assemblies
are critical to cell functions and fates. For example, the energy
dissipation self-assembly (or self-organization) of actins or tubulins
maintain the actin filaments and microtubules as the cytoskeletons
for cell migration[1] and mitosis.[2] The oligomerization of the extrinsic cell death
receptors (e.g., TRAIL-R1/R2, TNFR1, and CD95) initiates the downstream
signaling of apoptosis.[3] The self-assembly
of Apaf-1 and cytochrome c results in apoptosomes.[4] The nucleation of adaptor protein ASC triggers the formation
of inflammasomes that are critical for host defense.[5] Recently, prion-like proteins, such as the cytoplasmic
polyadenylation element-binding protein,[6] the mitochondrial antiviral signaling protein,[7] the T-cell-restricted intracellular antigen 1,[8] are reported to be beneficial to cells.[9] One reason for nature to select oligomeric or
higher-ordered protein structures is to achieve quantitative aspects
of signaling transduction, such as location, duration, thresholds,
amplitude, and amplification, even in the case of promiscuous binding.[10]Notably, enzymatic reactions[11] and molecular
self-assembly are the most utilized processes by nature to achieve
the oligomeric or higher-ordered structures with precise spatiotemporal
control. For example, enzyme-catalyzed conversion of guanosine diphosphates
(GDP) to guanosine triphosphates (GTP) on β-tubulin powers the
self-assembly of α- and β-tubulin onto the (+) end of
microtubules.[12] Despite the prevalence
of enzyme-instructed self-assembly (EISA) in nature,[13] the application of this concept in supramolecular chemistry
and chemical biology is just beginning. Recently, we and other researchers
are exploring this concept for developing a biomimetic, multiple-step
process for cancer therapy, especially in the studies and applications
of small molecular self-assembly controlled by enzymatic transformation.[14] For example, besides observing that intracellular
EISA of small peptides, instructed by esterase, selectively inhibit
cervical cancer cells,[15] we found that
pericellular EISA of small d-peptides[16] or nanoparticles,[17] catalyzed
by placental alkaline phosphatases (PLAP[18]), selectively inhibit cancer cells, including drug-resistance uterine
cancer cells.[16] Most recently, we found
that intracellular EISA can boost the activity of cisplatin against
cisplatin-resistant ovarian cancer cells.[19] Moreover, Maruyama et al. demonstrated the use of extracellular
enzymes (e.g., MMP-7) to instruct the self-assembly of peptide lipids
on cell membrane. They found that the internalization of the resulted
assemblies leads to the death of multiple cancer cell lines.[20] Using a phosphorylated carbohydrate derivative
as the substrate of membrane phosphatases (likely the tissue nonspecific
alkaline phosphatase (TNAP)[21]), Pires and
Ulijn et al. also achieved pericellular EISA to inhibit the osteosarcoma
cells without affecting related prechondrocyte cells with low expression
of phosphatases.[19] By applying phosphatase-based
EISA, Gao and co-workers recently demonstrated that EISA of a tetrapeptide
derivative[22] and a clinical used dye is
able to form tumor-specific nanofibers for cancer theranostics in
animal model bearing tumor of HeLa cells.[23] These results suggest that EISA is emerging as a new strategy, which
consists of enzymatic reaction and self-assembly steps, for selectively
targeting cancer cells.As an emerging biomimetic approach
for developing anticancer therapeutics,
EISA is fundamentally different from the well-established prodrug
approach.[24] In a prodrug approach, enzymatic
reaction in vivo releases the active parent drug that usually functions
as a monomeric agonist or antagonist. In EISA, only the assemblies,
not the unassembled products of the enzymatic conversion, are inhibitory
to cancer cells.[16] In other word, EISA,
combining biotransformation (i.e., enzyme catalysis) and molecular
self-assembly, mainly acts as a multiple-step process to inhibit cancer cells. Since it relies on localized molecular
assemblies rather than on an individual molecule, EISA is able to
directly disrupt multiple cellular processes[16a] and to create a global change (e.g., viscosity increase)[16a] in cellular environment of the cancer cells.
Thus, EISA promises a new way for targeting evolutionary redundancy
that results in drug resistance in cancer therapy.[14]Despite its promises, the use of EISA for cancer
therapy represents
a venture into a previously unknown and unexplored intersection of
chemical and biological spaces. Many challenges remain to be met in
order to develop EISA of small molecules for selectively killing cancer.
For example, achieving selectivity requires the knowledge of biomarkers
(e.g., enzymes or proteins) that differentiate cancer cells from normal
ones. Unfortunately, although the information accumulated in proteomics
research is filling this gap,[25] the information
we currently have is far from sufficient. Besides, there is considerable
difference between the methods and techniques used for studying the
different approaches of cancer therapy. Those used in conventional
chemotherapy and recently advanced immunotherapy may be inadequate
for EISA. Moreover, lack of understanding of the protein targets of
the assemblies or aggregates, as well as the limited techniques[26] to identify and characterize the interactions
between nanoscale assemblies of small molecules[27] and proteins, remains an obstacle for further advances
of EISA. Thus, a reliable molecular and cellular validation of EISA
is the first essential step for progressing both into and through
this unexplored space, as well as for generating the most reliable
conclusions. Following the updated view on target validation through
molecular design,[28] we choose to design
and synthesize a series of structural analogues of the substrates
and products of EISA. By using these molecules to treat the same set
of cells, we aim to answer the following questions: (1) how does the
molecular structure modulate the EISA properties of the precursors,
and thus regulate the biological activities of the resulting supramolecular
assemblies? (2) Our previous studies have validated that the pericellular
hydrogel/nanofibers formed by EISA of a small d-peptide containing
a phosphotyrosine can selectively inhibit cancer cells over normal
ones due to the overexpression of ALPs by cancer cells. How does the
number of phosphotyrosine on a single molecule affect the cellular
response even though the final products (i.e., hydrogelators) remain
the same? This question is valid and relevant because it is common
for a protein to have multiple post-translational modification sites
(including phosphorylation). (3) What is the relationship between
the levels of enzyme expression on different cell lines and the inhibitory
activities of the precursors? (4) What is the role of different isoenzymes
of ALPs in this multistep process for selectively inhibiting cancer
cells?To answer the above basic and important questions, we
systematically
synthesize two kinds of d-tetrapeptides containing one or
two phosphotyrosine residues and with the N-terminal capped by a naphthyl
group. By mutating the sequence of amino acids, we obtain six precursors
(a-1p, a-2p, b-1p, b-2p, c-1p, and c-2p) containing one (1p) or two phosphotyrosines (2p). All of the
precursors are able to turn into hydrogelators (a, b, and c) that self-assemble in water to form
nanofibers upon enzyme-instructed dephosphorylation (Figure ). Despite that they all contain
the same motifs (i.e., Phe, Tyr, and naphthyl), the resulting molecules
exhibit different states of self-assembly (or aggregation) both before
and after the action of ALP in vitro, according to
several complementary methods (e.g., transition electron microscopy
(TEM), static light scattering (SLS), and rheology) used for characterizing
molecular self-assembly in water. Being incubated with the same cell
lines, these precursors become self-assembling hydrogelators, and
result in distinct cellular responses. The precursors exhibit more
potent inhibitory activities when the d-tetrapeptides possess
sufficiently high self-assembling abilities. Incubating these precursors
or hydrogelators with several cancer cell lines and one normal cell
line, the cell viability assay indicates that, while the dephosphorylated
hydrogelators are innocuous to all the cell lines, the mono- and diphosphorylated
precursors selectively inhibit the cancer cells, but are innocuous
to the normal cells. This result agrees with that EISA localizes the
assemblies of the hydrogelators at the cancer cells,[16] which is further confirmed by imaging of fluorescent d-tetrapeptides. Besides, the monophosphorylated precursors
exhibit more potent inhibitory activity than the diphosphorylated
precursors; the cancer cell lines express higher level of ALPs are
more susceptible to the inhibition by the precursors (Scheme ). Using different uncompetitive
inhibitors of ALPs (e.g., l-Phe for PLAP[29] and tetramisole for TNAP[30]),
we delineate that the enzyme catalyzed dephosphorylation and the self-assembly
steps, together, result in the inhibition of the cancer cells. Moreover,
our experiments confirm that EISA of these structurally different
precursors/hydrogelators to inhibit cancer cells selectively according
to the different levels of the isozymes of ALPs expressed in different
cell lines. In addition, we find that zVAD-fmk,[31] an antagonist of apoptosis, and Nec-1,[32] an antagonist of necroptosis, counter the effect of EISA
on HeLa and Saos-2 cells, respectively, implying that the modality
of cell death likely associates with the types of the cancer cells.
As the first comprehensive validation of a multistep process for selective
inhibiting multiple cancer cell lines, this work contributes new insights
for answering the fundamental question that how different cells respond
to the EISA of structurally different molecules, and illustrates a
new and biomimetic approach for the development of spatiotemporal
controlled supramolecular processes/assemblies as potential anticancer
drugs.
Figure 1
Molecular structures of the precursors (a-2p, b-2p, c-2p, a-1p, b-1p, and c-1p) that have one or two phosphotyrosine residues
and the corresponding self-assembling d-peptides (i.e., hydrogelators a, b, and c).
Scheme 1
Enzyme-Instructed Self-Assembly of Small
Molecules to Inhibit Cancer
Cells
Molecular structures of the precursors (a-2p, b-2p, c-2p, a-1p, b-1p, and c-1p) that have one or two phosphotyrosine residues
and the corresponding self-assembling d-peptides (i.e., hydrogelators a, b, and c).
Results and Discussions
Molecular Design
In our exploration
of EISA of small
molecules for making supramolecular hydrogels, we unexpectedly found
that EISA of a small d-peptide derivative (e.g., Nap-d-Phe-d-Phe-d-pTyr), with the tyrosine
being phosphorylated, selectively inhibits cancer cells.[16] A recent tissue-based map of human proteome
has also validated PLAP as a generic difference between cancer and
normal cells.[25] This generic and rare difference
between cancer and normal cells presents an unprecedented opportunity
for targeting cancer cells selectively so it is worthwhile and necessary
to conduct a comprehensive molecular and structural validation of
EISA for potential cancer therapy. Thus, we designed and synthesized
a series of structural analogues of the substrates with one or two
tyrosine phosphorylated (a-1p, a-2p, b-1p, b-2p, c-1p, and c-2p) and their corresponding products (a, b, and c) of enzymatic dephosphorylation (Figure ). We choose to use backbone
of 2-(naphthalen-2-yl)acetic-d-Phe-d-Phe-d-Tyr-d-Tyr (NapDFDFDYDY) or its analogues (by simply varying the amino acid sequence)
for the following reasons: (1) 2-(Naphthalen-2-yl)acetic-Phe-Phe (NapFF)
and 2-(naphthalen-2-yl)acetic-Phe (NapF) are excellent motifs for
promoting molecular self-assembly in water due to the extensive aromatic–aromatic
interactions[33] and hydrogen bonding among
those molecules.[34] (2) Besides being part
of the molecular backbone, the incorporation of Tyr motifs provides
sites for mono- or diphosphorylation, which can elucidate whether
increasing the number of enzymatic triggers on a single molecule enhances
its solubility and selectivity for targeting cancer cells. (3) Varying
the amino acid sequence provides related yet different derivatives
for evaluating the relationship between the molecular structures and
self-assembly properties, as well as its corresponding cellular activities.
(4) We prefer the self-assembling molecules to be hydrogelators because
hydrogelation provides a facile assay to report molecular self-assembly
in water.[35] (5) The self-assembling molecules
are exclusively composed of d-amino acids because d-peptides, as the enantiomers of naturally occurring l-peptides,
usually resist endogenous proteases and barely to have strong interactions
with cellular proteins.
Synthesis
Figure shows the structures of a series of precursors
and
their corresponding hydrogelators resulted from ALP treatment. According
to Alewoods’ report,[36] we made tyrosinephosphate in 90% yield, followed by the conjugation of Fmoc protecting
group to the N-terminal. The resulting Fmoc-phosphotyrosine can be
directly used in the solid phase synthesis (SPPS) (Figure S1).[37] Utilizing Fmoc-protected d-amino acids, we prepared all the compounds by SPPS with 2-chlorotrityl
chloride resin, and obtained these molecules in 70% yields after high-performance
liquid chromatography (HPLC) purification. LC–MS and 1H NMR confirm the purity and structures of these designed molecules
(Figure S2).TEM images of aggregates/nanofibers
in the solutions of different
precursors (a-2p, a-1p, b-2p, b-1p, c-2p, and c-1p) or
nanofibers in the hydrogels formed by treating the solutions of the
precursors with alkaline phosphatase (ALP). C = 0.5
wt %, pH = 7.4, [ALP] = 1 U/mL. Insets are optical images of the solutions
of the precursors and the hydrogels formed after enzymatic dephosphorylation.
The scale bar is 100 nm.The concentration
is 0.5 wt %.The modulus
is taken at the frequency
of 6.28 rad/s.Diameter
of nanofibers.
Self-Assembly
of the Designed Molecules
We evaluate
the enzyme-instructed hydrogelation/self-assembly of the hydrogelators
in water at pH = 7.4 by using ALP to treat the precursors and using
transmission electron microscopy (TEM) to examine the formed nanostructures.
As shown in Figure , either the mono- or diphosphorylated precursors dissolve well in
water to make clear solutions, while TEM images reveal subtle difference
between them after water evaporates. The diphosphorylated precursors
generally tend to form amorphous aggregates, whereas the monophosphorylated
precursors start to form relative short nanofibers. This observation
agrees with that two phosphotyrosine residues enhance the aqueous
solubility of the precursors. Moreover, the structure difference of
these precursors leads to different self-assembly behaviors even when
they have same number of phosphates. For example, in the solutions
of a-1p and c-1p, there are sporadic nanofibers
interwoven into aggregates, and for b-1p, only short
nanofibers with diameters of around 7 ± 2 nm appear with relatively
high density. Similarly, a-2p and c-2p form
the aggregates with similar morphologies, but b-2p results
in larger aggregates than those of a-2p or c-2p. These results suggest that the backbone of DFDYDFDY has higher tendency to self-assemble
to form nanoscale structures among these analogues. Adding ALP into
the six precursor solutions afford the hydrogelators, which self-assemble
in water to form nanofibers that act as the matrices of the hydrogels
(Figure ). TEM images
reveal that the hydrogel networks, formed by the hydrogelator resulted
from enzymatic dephosphorylation of the precursors, are all composed
of uniformed nanofibers with similar diameters, as summarized in Table .
Figure 2
TEM images of aggregates/nanofibers
in the solutions of different
precursors (a-2p, a-1p, b-2p, b-1p, c-2p, and c-1p) or
nanofibers in the hydrogels formed by treating the solutions of the
precursors with alkaline phosphatase (ALP). C = 0.5
wt %, pH = 7.4, [ALP] = 1 U/mL. Insets are optical images of the solutions
of the precursors and the hydrogels formed after enzymatic dephosphorylation.
The scale bar is 100 nm.
Table 1
Summary of the EISA of the Precursors
compounda
a-2p
b-2p
c-2p
a-1p
b-1p
c-1p
in pbs (pH 7.4)
solution
solution
solution
solution
solution
solution
+ ALP (1 U/mL)
gel
gel
gel
gel
gel
gel
critical strain
Y0 (%)
1.0%
1.8%
1.0%
1.5%
2.5%
1.5%
storage modulus G′b (Pa)
29
79
60
54
123
100
loss modulus G″b (Pa)
8
30
23
12
39
63
morphology before ALP treatment (dc (nm))
aggregate
aggregate
aggregate
aggregate
nanofibers (7 ± 2)
aggregate
morphology after ALP treatment (dc (nm))
nanofiber (7 ± 2)
nanofiber (5 ± 2)
nanofiber (6 ± 2)
nanofiber (7 ± 2)
nanofiber (5 ± 2)
nanofiber (6 ± 2)
The concentration
is 0.5 wt %.
The modulus
is taken at the frequency
of 6.28 rad/s.
Diameter
of nanofibers.
(A) Rheological characterization
of hydrogels formed by different
precursors (a-2p, b-2p, c-2p, a-1p, b-1p, and c-1p) treated
with ALP (1.0 U/ml). C = 0.5 wt %. The strain-dependent
dynamic storage (G′) is taken at a frequency
equal to 6.28 rad/s, and the frequency-dependent dynamic storage (G′) is taken at a strain equal to 1.00%. (B) Time-dependent
rheometry to show the gelation points (that is, at the gel state,
where storage modulus (G′) dominates loss
modulus (G″)) of different precursors treated
with ALP (0.05 U/ml). C = 0.5 wt %. (C) Static light
scattering (SLS) shows the scattering signals after the addition of
ALP (1 U/mL) into the solution of different precursors at different
concentrations, pH = 7.4, detecting angle = 30°.To further determine the self-assembly properties
of the precursors
and hydrogelators, we also examine them by rheology and static light
scattering. Figure A shows the strain- and frequency-dependence of dynamic storage moduli
(G′) and loss moduli (G″)
of the hydrogels aforementioned. The values of G′
of all six hydrogels are larger than those of their G″, indicating that all the samples are viscoelastic materials.
The values of G′ of the hydrogels change little
during the frequency sweep (from 0.1 to 200 rad/s), suggesting that
these hydrogels have good tolerance to external shearing force. Overall,
both strain- and frequency-dependent G′ values
of the hydrogels formed by monophosphorylated precursors after ALP
treatment are larger than those of gels formed by diphosphorylated
precursors (Figure A). Since precursors with two phosphates likely need longer time
to turn into the hydrogelators completely, the lower values of G′ suggest incomplete dephosphorylation of the precursors
consisting of two phosphotyrosine residues (vide infra). In agreement with TEM image results, the rheology of the hydrogel
formed by dephosphorylating b-1p shows stronger mechanical
strength than those of the hydrogels formed by dephosphorylating c-1p or a-1p. The similar trend appears in the
hydrogels resulted from the treatment of a-2p, b-2p, or c-2p by ALP. These trends indicate that
the self-assembling property largely depends on the molecular structures
of the hydrogelators, and the backbone DFDYDFDY favors self-assembly in water. Gelation test
by rheometer shows that precursors with one phosphate form hydrogels
much faster than their corresponding analogues that possess two phosphates
(Figure B). Due to
that the backbone of DFDYDFDY exhibits higher tendency to self-assemble, the gelation point of b-1p emerges quickly—0.2 h after the addition of ALP,
followed by c-1p (0.3 h) and then a-1p (0.7
h). The dephosphorylation of a-2p, b-2p,
and c-2p forms hydrogels in the same order, taking 3.7,
2, and 2.5 h, respectively. In general, the precursors with two phosphates,
requiring two dephosphorylation steps, take considerably longer time
to turn into hydrogels than those of monophosphorylated precursors
do. These results also agree with static light scattering (SLS) data
(Figure C), which
shows that the solution of b-1p exhibits strongest signal
after ALP treatment for 24 h, followed by c-1p, b-2p, a-1p, c-2p and a-2p.
Figure 3
(A) Rheological characterization
of hydrogels formed by different
precursors (a-2p, b-2p, c-2p, a-1p, b-1p, and c-1p) treated
with ALP (1.0 U/ml). C = 0.5 wt %. The strain-dependent
dynamic storage (G′) is taken at a frequency
equal to 6.28 rad/s, and the frequency-dependent dynamic storage (G′) is taken at a strain equal to 1.00%. (B) Time-dependent
rheometry to show the gelation points (that is, at the gel state,
where storage modulus (G′) dominates loss
modulus (G″)) of different precursors treated
with ALP (0.05 U/ml). C = 0.5 wt %. (C) Static light
scattering (SLS) shows the scattering signals after the addition of
ALP (1 U/mL) into the solution of different precursors at different
concentrations, pH = 7.4, detecting angle = 30°.
Cellular Responses
To investigate how molecular modification
and the corresponding EISA affects the cellular response, we use MTT
cell viability assay to examine the cytotoxicity of the precursors
toward HeLa cells and Saos-2 cells, two cell lines known to allow
EISA to form pericellular nanofibers.[16,19] Our results
(Figure A) show the
following: (1) All the six precursors inhibit both HeLa and Saos-2
cells in a dose-dependent manner at the concentrations above certain
thresholds, indicating that enzymatic dephosphorylation leads to the
self-assembly of these d-tetrapeptidic derivatives on the
cell surface to kill HeLa and Saos-2 cells. (2) b-2p or b-1p exhibits significantly higher cytotoxicity to both HeLa
and Saos-2 cell than their analogues (i.e., a-2p, c-2p or a-1p, c-1p). These results
match with the TEM and rheological results that the Nap-DFDYDFDY motif has the highest self-assembling
ability. (3) In general, Saos-2 cells are more vulnerable to the six
precursors compared with HeLa cells, largely because of the significantly
higher expression of ALPs on Saos-2 (vide infra, Figure ). (4) The precursors with
one phosphotyrosine residue (i.e., a-1p, b-1p, and c-1p) are more cytotoxic to HeLa cells than those
with two phosphotyrosine residues (i.e., a-2p, b-2p, and c-2p), while the precursors with same
backbones (i.e., b-1p and b-2p; c-1p and c-2p) show similar inhibitory activities to Saos-2
cells, except that a-1p is more potent than a-2p. These observations agree with the different levels of expression
of ALPs on the surface of HeLa and Saos-2 cells (Figure ). To be specific (Scheme ), HeLa cells express
less ALPs on cell surface than Saos-2. For the precursors with two
phosphotyrosines, when one of the phosphates is removed by ALP, the
resulting intermediates can drift away due to relatively good solubility
rendered by the remaining phosphotyrosine group before continuously
interacting with ALP to lose another phosphate and to result in self-assembly.
For the monophosphorylated precursors, self-assembly immediately occurs
on cell surface upon dephosphorylation by ALP, and then kills cells.
So it is reasonable that the precursors with two phosphotyrosine exhibit
reduced cytotoxicity, comparing to monophosphorylated precursors,
on HeLa cells. In the case of Saos-2 cells, there is considerably
high expression level of ALPs on the cell surface, which quickly dephosphorylates
the two phosphotyrosine residues on a single molecule before they
diffuse away (Scheme ). So mono- and diphosphorylated precursors show almost same cytotoxicity
toward Saos-2 cells.
Figure 4
(A) 48-h cell
viability (determined by MTT assay) of HeLa and Saos-2
cells incubated with different precursors at the concentrations of
200, 300, and 400 μM in culture medium. The initial cell numbers
are 1 × 104 cells/well. (B) IC50 of different
precursors/hydrogelators against different cell lines after 48-h incubation.
Figure 6
Confocal microscopy
images of HeLa and Saos-2 cells after PLAP
or TNAP antibody staining. Nuclei are stained by Hoechst 33342.
(A) 48-h cell
viability (determined by MTT assay) of HeLa and Saos-2
cells incubated with different precursors at the concentrations of
200, 300, and 400 μM in culture medium. The initial cell numbers
are 1 × 104 cells/well. (B) IC50 of different
precursors/hydrogelators against different cell lines after 48-h incubation.To evaluate the generality that
the EISA can selectively inhibit
cancer cells, we treated SK-OV-3, A2780cis (two drug-resistant ovarian
carcinoma cell lines), T98G cells (a glioblas-toma multiforma tumor
cell line) with the six precursors, using the same procedure as that
for the HeLa and Saos-2 cells. Our results reveal that all the six
precursors inhibit these cancer cells above certain concentrations
(Figure S3). As a control, we also examined
the cellular response of HS-5 cell (an immortalized normal stromal
cell[38]) upon the treatment of precursors,
and found that all of precursors hardly show any cytotoxicity (Figure S3) to the HS-5 cells at the concentrations
that they exhibit significant cytotoxicities to the cancer cells.
These results confirm that EISA of these precursors can selectively
inhibit cancer cells over normal ones due to overexpression of ALPs
on the cancer cells.[39] According to Figure B and Table , which summarizes the 48-h
IC50 of these precursors on different cell lines, the IC50 values of monophosphorylated precursors are generally lower
than those of diphosphorylated ones on HeLa, SK-OV-3, and A2780cis
cells. This result can be explained by that the intermediates with
one phosphotyrosine would drift away before self-assembling (Scheme , upper left). The
monophosphorylated precursors are less inhibitory to SK-OV-3 cells
than to A2780cis, indicating that different cells exhibit different
response to the precursors. Similar to the case of Saos-2, T98G exhibits
almost same response to the mono- and diphosphorylated precursors,
suggesting that the ALP level on T98G surface is sufficient to dephosphorylate
the second phosphotyrosine before the intermediate diffusing way.
However, T98G is less vulnerable than Saos-2 to the six precursors,
suggesting higher level of ALP expression on Saos-2 than on T98G cells.
The lower left panel of Scheme illustrates the case of Saos-2. By measuring the membrane-associated
ALP activities with pNPP assay (Figure S4), we found that the cells with higher membrane ALP abundance are
generally more vulnerable to these precursors. These results not only
reveal the relationship among cellular responses, molecular structures,
and ALP levels, but also indicate that increasing the numbers of enzyme
active sites helps to amplify the selectivity in a situation where
molecules need to bypass some cells with relatively high ALP expression
to reach their targets.
Table 2
48-h IC50 (μg/mL)
of Different Precursors/Hydrogelators against Different Cell Lines
compound
a-2p
b-2p
c-2p
a-1p
b-1p
c-1p
a
b
c
HeLa
>483
217
>483
177
132
301
>500
>500
>500
Saos-2
326
144
338
170
132
283
>500
>500
>500
A2780cis
>483
>483
>483
189
212
283
>500
>500
>500
SK-OV-3
>483
>483
>483
283
407
372
>500
>500
>500
T98G
357
367
360
327
283
301
>500
>500
>500
HS-5
>483
>483
>483
354
310
>443
>500
>500
>500
Although the different sequences of
the tetrapeptides may result
in different self-assembled nanostructures to interact with the cells,
the cell viabilities are largely inverse proportional to the intensity
of the signal of SLS (Figure S5), further
supporting that the degree of self-assembly indeed correlates with
the effect of EISA on cell fate.Notably, the corresponding
hydrogelators (a, b, and c),
hardly inhibit any of the cell lines
tested even at the concentration as high as 500 μM, which completely
differ from the cytotoxicities of the six precursors. This result
agrees with that the nanofibers generated by EISA result in inhibition.
Moreover, the results in Figure indicate that cellular responses of the six precursors
are closely associated with molecular structure, self-assembly ability,
dephosphorylation rate, and cell difference.
The Nanofibers Forming
in Pericellular Space
The distribution
of Hoechst 33342 (a nucleus dye), upon the formation of the pericellular
hydrogel/nanonets on cells, further validates the assumption in Scheme . As shown in Figure A, after incubation
with b-2p at 500 μM for 6 h and then the addition
of Hoechst 33342 for 5 min, HeLa cells show the fluorescence in nuclei,
behaving similarly to the control cells (i.e., untreated HeLa cells).
Being treated with b-1p (500 μM), HeLa cells hardly
show blue fluorescence in nuclei, agreeing with that the formation
of pericellular nanofibers prevents or delays the nuclei dye entering
the cells. This result further confirms that b-1p affords
nanofibers faster than b-2p does on HeLa cells, which
is consistent with the observed difference in the cytotoxicity of b-1p and b-2p. Contrasting to the case of HeLa
cells, Hoechst 33342 is unable to enter the Saos-2 cells treated with
either b-2p or b-1p at 500 μM for
6 h (Figure A). Moreover,
after staining for 10 min, some nuclei dyes are even trapped in the
pericellular nanofibers. This observation differs drastically from
the staining of the untreated Saos-2 cells (showing fluorescence in
the nuclei) and indicates that b-1p and b-2p result in almost the same density of self-assembled nanofibers due
to high abundance of ALPs on Saos-2 cells. This result also agrees
with the same toxicity of b-1p and b-2p on
Saos-2 cells.
Figure 5
(A) Nuclei staining (by Hoechst 33342) of HeLa and Saos-2
cells
treated with b-2p and b-1p (500 μM)
for 6 h. HeLa cells were stained for 5 min, and Saos-2 for 10 min
to guarantee a clear contrast in control images. Accumulated nanofibers
on cell surface trap the Hoechst 33342 and prevent this nuclei dye
from entering cells. (B) Chemical structures of NBD-2p and NBD-1p (analogues of b-2p and b-1p), which turn into the same hydrogelator after dephosphorylation.
(C) Confocal microscopy images of HeLa and Saos-2 cells treated with NBD-2p and NBD-1p for 12 h. Nuclei are stained
by Hoechst 33342.
(A) Nuclei staining (by Hoechst 33342) of HeLa and Saos-2
cells
treated with b-2p and b-1p (500 μM)
for 6 h. HeLa cells were stained for 5 min, and Saos-2 for 10 min
to guarantee a clear contrast in control images. Accumulated nanofibers
on cell surface trap the Hoechst 33342 and prevent this nuclei dye
from entering cells. (B) Chemical structures of NBD-2p and NBD-1p (analogues of b-2p and b-1p), which turn into the same hydrogelator after dephosphorylation.
(C) Confocal microscopy images of HeLa and Saos-2 cells treated with NBD-2p and NBD-1p for 12 h. Nuclei are stained
by Hoechst 33342.To directly visualize
the pericellular nanofibers on cells, we
designed and synthesized NBD-2p and NBD-1p by replacing the Nap motif with NBD (Figure B). The replacement of N-terminal-capped
motifs results in reduced self-assembly ability and low cytotoxicity
(Figure S6) of NBD-2p and NBD-1p, but still allows their corresponding hydrogelators
to form nanofibers in pericellular space of cells. According to Figure C, treating HeLa
cells with NBD-2p (500 μM) for 12 h only leads
to faint yellow fluorescence inside the cells, likely due to endocytosis,
while the addition of NBD-1p into HeLa cell culture results
in strong fluorescence on the surface of the cells. Contrasting to
the case of HeLa cells, the addition of NBD-2p or NBD-1p in Saos-2 cell culture leads to the same phenomenon—significant
fluorescence appears on cell surface (Figure C), which is obviously more fluorescent than
that on HeLa cell treated by NBD-1p. Because NBD-modified
peptides fluoresce intensely in self-assembled nanofibers,[40] the yellow fluorescence reflects the amount
of nanofibers formed by EISA of NBD-2p or NBD-1p. These results, being consistent with Hoechst 333342 staining results
and cellular response on HeLa and Saos-2, further verify the assumption
illustrated in Scheme .Two previous works visualized the self-assembled nanofibers
formed
by EISA on cell surface by electron microscopy (EM).[16a,19] To provide direct evidence that the hydrogelators self-assemble
in fibrous structures on cell membrane, we use TEM images of the freeze-drying
sample to confirm the formation of nanofibrils of the tetrapeptides
(Figure S7), using the method described
in our previous work.[16a]
Expression
of the Isozymes of ALPs on HeLa and Saos-2 Cells
As ectophosphatases,
ALPs have different isotypes.[41] Using antibody
staining, we evaluated the expression level
of two types of isozymes of ALPs on HeLa and Saos-2 cells. As shown
in Figure , HeLa cells express more PLAP than Saos-2 cells while
TNAP are more abundant on Saos-2 cells. According to the staining,
Saos-2 cells, in overall, express significantly more ALPs on cell
surface. This result, together with the Hoechst 33342 staining and
imaging results of NBD-1p and NBD-2p on
HeLa and Saos-2 cells, not only explains the different cellular response
of HeLa and Saos-2 cells, but further supports the assumption illustrated
in Scheme .Confocal microscopy
images of HeLa and Saos-2 cells after PLAP
or TNAP antibody staining. Nuclei are stained by Hoechst 33342.
Cell Responses under ALP
Inhibition
Since antibody
staining is unable to reveal the activity of ALPs on cancer cells,
we choose to inhibit ALPs and evaluate cell responses. On the basis
of the fact that HeLa cells express more PLAP[42] on their surface than Saos-2 do, we used l-phenylalanine
(l-Phe, an uncompetitive inhibitor for PLAP[43]) to inhibit PLAP during cell culture. As shown in Figure A, the cytotoxicity
of all six precursors against HeLa cell decrease significantly after
the addition of l-Phe (3 mM). Since l-Phe is cell
compatible at 3 mM, the decrease of the cytotoxicity likely originates
from the inhibition of PLAP, which slows down the EISA process. This
result confirms that PLAP catalyzes the formation of hydrogelators a, b, or c, and their self-assembly
on cell surface for inhibiting the growth of HeLa cells. However,
the addition of (−)-tetraimisole (an uncompetitive inhibitor
of TNAP[41]) hardly rescues HeLa cells (Figure S8). This result indicates that PLAP catalyzed
EISA largely contributes the death of HeLa cells. While the addition
of (−)-tetramisole significantly increases the cell viability
of Saos-2 cells (Figure B), the addition of l-Phe into Saos-2 culture hardly rescue
the Saos-2 cells at all (Figure S8). This
result agrees with that the majority of the phosphatases on the membrane
of Saos-2 are TNAP (Figure ). Notably, as shown in Figure B, (−)-tetramisole generally saves more Saos-2
cells treated by diphosphorylated precursors than monophosphorylated
ones, which further confirms the inhibition mechanism illustrated
in Scheme . Because
the inhibition of ALPs on cell surface effectively reduces the numbers
of active phosphatases, it is reasonable that there are more significant
reductions of the cytotoxicity of diphosphorylated precursors than
those of the monophosphorylated precursors.
Figure 7
Viability of (A) HeLa
and (B) Saos-2 cells incubated with six precursors
(500 μM) with or without different phosphotase inhibitors for
48 h; [l-phe] = 3 mM; [levamisole] = 1 mM.
Viability of (A) HeLa
and (B) Saos-2 cells incubated with six precursors
(500 μM) with or without different phosphotase inhibitors for
48 h; [l-phe] = 3 mM; [levamisole] = 1 mM.To further confirm the critical role of the membrane-bound
ALPs
(i.e., endogenous ectophosphatases), we add ALP (5 U/mL), as an exogenous,
soluble enzyme, together with these precursors into the HeLa and Saos-2
cell culture. As shown in Figure S9, the
addition of the soluble ALP abrogates the cytotoxicity of the precursors
to a certain extent. This result therefore proves that the dephosphorylation
of the precursors by the membrane-bound ALPs on the cell surface,
indeed, localize the self-assembly of the hydrogelators on the cell
surface to form nanofibers in the pericellular space to inhibit the
cancer cells.
The Modality of Cell Death
To unravel
the mechanism
of cell death induced by pericellular nanofibers formed by EISA, we
examine the effect of a pan-caspase inhibitor (i.e., zVAD-fmk (45
μM))[31] and a necroptosis inhibitor
(i.e., Nec-1 (50 μM)),[32] respectively,
on the cytotoxicity caused by b-1p (the most effective
one) on HeLa and Saos-2 cells. zVAD-fmk, a cell permeable irreversible
caspase inhibitor with no cytotoxic effects, obviously ameliorates
the cytotoxicity of b-1p against HeLa cells but hardly
shows any effect on Saos-2 cells. On the contrary, Nec-1, significantly
suppresses the inhibition of b-1p on Saos-2 cells but
aggravates the situation in case of HeLa cells (Figure ). These results indicate that the nanofibers
formed by b-1p after EISA largely result in apoptosis
of HeLa cells and necroptosis of Saos-2 cells.
Figure 8
Dose-curves show that
(A) pan-caspase inhibitor (Z-VAD-FMK) suppresses
the cytotoxicity of b-1p on HeLa cells while necroptosis
inhibitor (Nec-1) aggravates the inhibition and (B) Z-VAD-FMK has
no effect on the toxicity of b-1p on Saos-2 cells but
Nec-1 ameliorates the inhibition.
Dose-curves show that
(A) pan-caspase inhibitor (Z-VAD-FMK) suppresses
the cytotoxicity of b-1p on HeLa cells while necroptosis
inhibitor (Nec-1) aggravates the inhibition and (B) Z-VAD-FMK has
no effect on the toxicity of b-1p on Saos-2 cells but
Nec-1 ameliorates the inhibition.
Rates of Dephosphorylation
To examine the relationship
between enzymatic dephosphorylation rate and cellular response, we
also evaluate the rate of enzymatic dephosphorylation process, using 31P NMR at the gelation concentration (i.e., 0.5 wt %, ALP
= 0.02 U/mL). Unlike 31P NMR obtained in DMSO (Figure S2), which shows two peaks for the two
phosphates on a single molecule when enlarging the scale, 31P NMR is unable to distinguish the two phosphates of a-2p, b-2p, and c-2p when the solvent is Tris
buffer. According to time-dependent 31P NMR spectra (Figure S10) of the reaction mixture, the dephosphorylation
of a-2p or a-1p almost completes within
24 h, though that of a-2p is slightly slower, likely
due to two phosphates on a-2p. The dephosphorylation
rates of c-2p and c-1p are slower than those
of a-2p and a-1p, followed by those of b-2p and b-1p. The dephosphorylation rates of
these precursors at gelation concentrations follow the opposite trend
to their cytotoxicity against cancer cells, which likely originates
from the strong tendency of self-assembly of b. Even
a small portion of precursors, for example, of b-1p,
are dephosphorylated, the mixture tends to self-assemble to make the
solution viscous, which decreases the diffusion of molecules and enzymes
and retards the dephosphorylation process. This observation, indeed,
agrees with the strong self-assembling tendency of DFDYDFDY suggested by TEM and rheology
data (vide supra).The opposing trends between the results in Figure and Figure prompt us to evaluate the
dephosphorylation process at the concentration used in cell culture
(i.e., 500 μM) in PBS buffer for better understanding the different
cytotoxicities exhibited by different precursors. For a-2p, b-2p and c-2p, the dephosphorylation
of either of the two phosphotyrosines produces the intermediate P1 or P1′ (Figure S11). We would expect that enzyme shows different affinity
to two phosphates at different positions on the precursors. However,
according to Figure A, B, C, the curves of these intermediates, which goes up first and
decays later, hardly show significant difference, suggesting that
ALPs dephosphorylate the phosphotyrosine regardless its position on
the precursors. In the case of monophosphorylated precursors (i.e., a-1p, b-1p, and c-1p), ALPs dephosphorylate
these precursors at almost the same rate, indicating that the structure
difference barely affects enzymatic dephosphorylation (Figure D, E, F). These results, on
the other hand, suggest that the different cytotoxicity of a-1p, b-1p, and c-1p largely originates from
the self-assembling abilities of a, b, and c, which depend on their molecular structures.
Figure 9
Time-dependent curves
for dephosphorylation process of the precursors
(A) a-2p, (B) b-2p, (C) c-2p, (D) a-1p, (E) b-1p, (F) c-1p, after incubation with ALP (0.1 U/mL) at 37 °C. The precursors
gradually turn into hydrogelators after enzymatic dephosphorylation
by ALP. The precursors dissolve in PBS (PBS) buffer at a concentration
of 500 μM.
Time-dependent curves
for dephosphorylation process of the precursors
(A) a-2p, (B) b-2p, (C) c-2p, (D) a-1p, (E) b-1p, (F) c-1p, after incubation with ALP (0.1 U/mL) at 37 °C. The precursors
gradually turn into hydrogelators after enzymatic dephosphorylation
by ALP. The precursors dissolve in PBS (PBS) buffer at a concentration
of 500 μM.
Conclusions
In
summary, we designed and synthesized a series of d-tetrapeptide
precursors containing one or two enzymatic dephosphorylation sites
(i.e., phosphotyrosine) and evaluated their inhibitory activities
on several representative cells lines. Besides establishing that EISA
is a fundamentally new multiple-step process for
selectively inhibiting cancer cells, our results reveal several key
insights related to the structure–activity relationship (SAR)
of EISA for killing cancer cells. (1) The increase of the number of
phosphotyrosine, though improving the aqueous solubility of the precursors,
hardly improves the inhibitory activity of EISA. This result suggests
that it is critical to generate the self-assembling molecules quickly
for inhibiting cancer cells. (2) The relatively high activities of b-1p and b-2p imply that the phenylalanine residues
on the same side of peptidic backbone apparently result in more effective
self-assembly. (3) The modality of cell death caused by EISA depends
on the cell types, which implies it may depend on the isozymes of
ALPs. However, the detailed cell death mechanism[44] remains to be elucidated. (4) By varying the numbers of
enzyme action sites on the peptides, one should be able to tune the
cytotoxicity against different cancer cells by controlling the self-assembling
process. (5) Most importantly, the observation of the apparently counterintuitive
results—precursors significantly inhibit the cancer cells,
while hydrogelators remain innocuous—confirms that EISA, as
a multiple-step process, accounts for the selective inhibition of
cancer cells. Since ALP may play a key role in cell survival via purinergic
signaling pathway,[45] this work illustrates
a facile way to turn a cell survival signaling into a cell killing
process by simply engineering the molecules for dephosphorylation
and taking advantage of the ALPs overexpressed on cancer cells. In
a more broad perspective, the approach illustrated in this work should
be applicable for the exploration of supramolecular assemblies in
cellular environment by using other enzymes[46] and other well-established self-assembling molecules and systems.[47]
Authors: Natalie Gilks; Nancy Kedersha; Maranatha Ayodele; Lily Shen; Georg Stoecklin; Laura M Dember; Paul Anderson Journal: Mol Biol Cell Date: 2004-09-15 Impact factor: 4.138
Authors: N Takahashi; L Duprez; S Grootjans; A Cauwels; W Nerinckx; J B DuHadaway; V Goossens; R Roelandt; F Van Hauwermeiren; C Libert; W Declercq; N Callewaert; G C Prendergast; A Degterev; J Yuan; P Vandenabeele Journal: Cell Death Dis Date: 2012-11-29 Impact factor: 8.469
Authors: Alexandra Brito; Patrícia M R Pereira; Rui L Reis; Rein V Ulijn; Jason S Lewis; Ricardo A Pires; Iva Pashkuleva Journal: Nanoscale Date: 2020-10-01 Impact factor: 7.790