| Literature DB >> 27713271 |
Külliki Saar1, Helgi Saar2, Mats Hansen3, Ülo Langel4,5, Margus Pooga6.
Abstract
Interest in cell-penetrating peptides (CPPs) as delivery agents has fuelled a large number of studies conducted on cultured cells and in mice. However, only a few studies have been devoted to the behaviour of CPPs in human tissues. Therefore, we performed ex vivo tissue-dipping experiments where we studied the distribution of CPP-protein complexes in samples of freshly harvested human tissue material. We used the carcinoma or hyperplasia-containing specimens of the uterus and the cervix, obtained as surgical waste from nine hysterectomies. Our aim was to evaluate the tissue of preference (epithelial versus muscular/connective tissue, carcinoma versus adjacent histologically normal tissue) for two well-studied CPPs, the transportan and the TAT-peptide. We complexed biotinylated CPPs with avidin--galactosidase (ABG), which enabled us to apply whole-mount X-gal staining as a robust detection method. Our results demonstrate that both peptides enhanced the tissue distribution of ABG. The enhancing effect of the tested CPPs was more obvious in the normal tissue and in some specimens we detected a striking selectivity of CPP-ABG complexes for the normal tissue. This unexpected finding encourages the evaluation of CPPs as local delivery agents in non-malignant situations, for example in the intrauterine gene therapy of benign gynaecological diseases.Entities:
Keywords: carcinoma; cell-penetrating peptides; ex vivo; tissue selectivity
Year: 2010 PMID: 27713271 PMCID: PMC4033972 DOI: 10.3390/ph3030621
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceuticals (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8247
Figure 1Schematic overview of the experimental setup: specimen processing, tissue-dipping assay and post-exposure treatment of tissue samples.
Results from the tissue-dipping experiments.
| Specimens | Experiment abbreviation and comments | Exposure solution parameters | Malignancy grade, stage | Character of X-gal staining, Figure number and panel | ||||
| [bCPP] μM | ABG μg | molar ratio bCPP/ABG | ABG | {bTAT+ABG} | {bTP+ABG} | |||
| ACE specimens: contained malignant epithelial tissue (malignant endometrium, E) and adjacent histologically normal smooth muscle tissue (normal myometrium, M) | ACE_1 | 15 | 60 | 165:1 | G1, stage IA | even | even | M >> E |
| ACE_2 | 15 | 66 | 150:1 | G1, stage IA | E > M | even | M > E | |
| ACE_3§ | 5 | 66 | 50:1 | G1, stage IB | - | even* | even* | |
| ACE_4§¥ | 3.25 | 33 | 65:1 | G1, stage IB | - | M >> E | even* | |
| ACE_5§¥ | 3.25 | 33 | 65:1 | G1, stage IIIB | - | even* | even | |
| ACE_6§¥ | 3.25 | 33 | 65:1 | G3, stage IB | - | M > E | M > E | |
| SCCC specimens: contained malignant epithelial tissue (E) and adjacent histologically normal cervical stroma (C) | SCCC_1 | 5 | 60 | 55:1 | G3, stage IVB previous chemotherapy | C > E | not tested | C >> E |
| SCCC_2 | 5 | 66 | 50:1 | G3, stage IB2 | - | even* | even* | |
| Hyperplasia of the endometrium: contained hyperplastic endometrium and adjacent histo-logically normal myometrium | hyperplasia | 20 | 66 | 200:1 | - | - | even | even |
ACE: adenocarcinoma of the endometrium; SCCC: squamous cell carcinoma of the cervix;
* denotes weak staining; § denotes soft specimen and 1 h exposure; ¥ denotes 2 mL exposure solution.
Figure 2Macrophotographs (at 7.5x magnification) of tissue samples exposed to uncomplexed ABG (a), {bTAT+ABG} (b) and {bTP+ABG} (c) in the experiment abbreviated as “ACE_1” (see Table 1 for details). The tissue samples were from the specimen diagnosed with stage IA adenocarcinoma of the endometrium (ACE). The myometrial parts of samples are directed to the left. The image of the negative control (“no drug”) is in panel d.
Figure 3Macrophotographs (at 10x magnification) of tissue samples exposed to 60 μg of uncomplexed ABG (a), to a complex of 60 μg ABG with 5 μM bTP (b) and to a complex of 5 μg ABG with 5 μM bTP (c) in the experiment abbreviated as “SCCC_1” (see Table 1 for details). The tissue samples were from the specimen diagnosed with stage IVB squamous cell carcinoma of the cervix (SCCC). The cervical stromal parts of samples are directed to the left (a, b, c) or down (d). The image of the negative control (“no drug”) is in panel d.
Figure 4Macrophotographs (at 10x magnification) of tissue samples exposed to uncomplexed ABG (a), {bTAT+ABG} (b) and {bTP+ABG} (c) in the experiment abbreviated as “hyperplasia” (see Table 1 for the details). The tissue samples were from the specimen diagnosed with hyperplasia of the endometrium without atypia. The image of the negative control (“no drug”) is in panel d.
Figure 5The macrophotograph (at 25x magnification) of the tissue sample exposed to {bTAT+ABG} in the experiment abbreviated as “ACE_4” (see Table 1 for details). The tissue sample was from the specimen diagnosed with stage IB adenocarcinoma of the endometrium (ACE). Note the blue X-gal staining in the myometrium and the absence of the staining in the adenocarcinoma and its invasions into the myometrium.