| Literature DB >> 28320393 |
Susan Marqus1, Elena Pirogova1, Terrence J Piva2.
Abstract
Cancer along with cardiovascular disease are the main causes of death in the industrialised countries around the World. Conventional cancer treatments are losing their therapeutic uses due to drug resistance, lack of tumour selectivity and solubility and as such there is a need to develop new therapeutic agents. Therapeutic peptides are a promising and a novel approach to treat many diseases including cancer. They have several advantages over proteins or antibodies: as they are (a) easy to synthesise, (b) have a high target specificity and selectivity and (c) have low toxicity. Therapeutic peptides do have some significant drawbacks related to their stability and short half-life. In this review, strategies used to overcome peptide limitations and to enhance their therapeutic effect will be compared. The use of short cell permeable peptides that interfere and inhibit protein-protein interactions will also be evaluated.Entities:
Keywords: Apoptosis; Cancer; Cell penetrating peptides; Therapeutic peptides
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28320393 PMCID: PMC5359827 DOI: 10.1186/s12929-017-0328-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Sci ISSN: 1021-7770 Impact factor: 8.410
Advantages and disadvantages of therapeutic peptides (Adopted from [25])
| Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|
| High potency of action | Metabolic instability |
| High target specificity and selectivity | Poor membrane permeability |
| Wide range of targets | Poor oral bioavailability |
| Low toxicity | Poor solubility |
| Fewer side effects | Rapid clearance |
| Low accumulation in tissues | High manufacturing cost |
| High biological and chemical diversity | Poor activity |
Therapeutic peptides and their uses
| Peptide name | Validation | Cell lines examineda | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Antimicrobial peptides | |||
| Magainin II | in vitro | Bladder cancer cells: RT4 pathologic grade 1, 647 V grade 2, and 486P grade 4 | [ |
| NRC-3 and NRC-7 | In vitro & in vivo | Breast cancer: MDA-MB-231, MDA-MB-468, SKBR3, MCF-7 and paclitaxel resistant MCF-7 (MCF-7-TX400) and murine mammary 4 T1 carcinoma cells | [ |
| Buforin IIb | In vitro & in vivo | Cervical carcinoma (HeLa), leukaemia (Jurkat cells) and lung cancer (NCI-H460) cells | [ |
| BR2 | in vitro | Cervical carcinoma (HeLa), colon cancer (HCT116) and murine melanoma (B16-F10) cells | [ |
| Cell penetrating peptides | |||
| Dox-TAT | in vitro | Breast cancer (MCF-7 and MCF-7/ADR) and rat prostate carcinoma (AT3B1) cells | [ |
| Tumour targeting peptides | |||
| RGD-SSL-Dox | In vitro & in vivo | Melanoma (A375) and murine (B16-F10) melanoma cells | [ |
| LPD-PEG-NGR | In vitro & in vivo | Fibrosarcoma (HT-1080) cells | [ |
| Therapeutic peptides target transduction pathway | |||
| PNC-2 and PNC-7 | in vitro | Pancreatic cancer (MIA-PaCa) cells | [ |
| Cardiac natriuretic peptides | In vitro & in vivo | Pancreatic cancer (HPAC), renal carcinoma (SW156), breast adenocarcinoma (HCCI428), ovarian adenocarcinoma (NIHOVCAR-3), modularly thyroid carcinoma (TT), glioblastoma (LNZTA3WT4) and lung carcinoma (NCI-H1963) cells | [ |
| RGD-PEG-Suc-PD0325901 | In vitro & in vivo | Glioblastoma (U87MG) cells | [ |
| VWCS | In vitro | Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) and oral epidermoid carcinoma (KB) cells | [ |
| FWCS | In vitro | Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) and oral epidermoid carcinoma (KB) cells | [ |
| Therapeutic peptides target cell cycle | |||
| p16 | In vitro | Pancreatic cancer (AsPC-1 and BxPC-3) cells | [ |
| Bac-7-ELP-p21 | In vitro | Ovarian carcinoma (SKOV-3) cells | [ |
| Pen-ELP-p21 | In vitro | Cervical carcinoma (HeLa) and ovarian carcinoma (SKOV-3) cells | |
| Therapeutic peptides induce cell death | |||
| TAT-Bim | In vitro & in vivo | Murine T-cell lymphoma (EL4), pancreatic cancer (Panc-02) and melanoma (B16-F10) cells | [ |
| Poropeptide-Bax | In vitro | Melanoma (SK-MEL-28) cells | [ |
| R8-Bax | In vitro & in vivo | Cervical carcinoma (HeLa) and murine mammary carcinoma (TS/A) cells | [ |
| CT20p-NP | In vitro & in vivo | Breast cancer (MCF-7 or MDA-MB-231) and colon cancer (HCT-116) cells | [ |
| RRM-MV | In vitro | Squamous cell carcinoma (COLO16) and malignant melanoma (MM96L), and murine melanoma (B16-F10) cells | [ |
| RRM-IL12 | In vitro | Mouse melanoma (B16-F10) cells | [ |
| Therapeutic peptides target tumour suppressor protein | |||
| PNC-27 | In vitro | Cervical carcinoma (HeLa), colon cancer (SW1417 and H11299), breast cancer (MDA-MB-453 and MCF-7), osteosarcoma (SAOS2), leukaemia (K562), pancreatic cancer (MIA-PaCa-2) and melanoma (A-2058) cells. Rat k-ras-transformed pancreatic cancer (TUC-3) and transformed endothelial (E49) cells | [ |
| PNC-21 | In vitro | Cervical carcinoma (HeLa), colon cancer (SW1417 and H1299), breast cancer (MDA-MB-453), and osteosarcoma (SAOS2) cells. Rat k-ras-transformed pancreatic cancer (TUC-3) and transformed endothelial (E49) cells | [ |
| PNC-28 | In vitro & in vivo | Breast cancer (MDA-MB-453), colon cancer (H1299 and SW1417), osteosarcoma (SAOS2), cervical carcinoma (HeLa) and pancreatic cancer (MiaPaCa-2) cells. Rat k-ras-transformed pancreatic cancer (TUC-3) and transformed endothelial (E49) cells | [ |
| Tat-αHDM2 | In vitro & In vivo | Melanoma (MM-23, MM-24 and MM-26), retinoblastoma (Y79 and WERI), osteosarcoma (U2OS), and cervical carcinoma (C33A) cells | [ |
| Therapeutic peptides target transcription factors | |||
| Int-H1-S6A, F8A | In vitro | Breast cancer (MCF-7) cells | [ |
| Pen-ELP-H1 | In vitro | Breast cancer (MCF-7) cells | [ |
| BACl-ELP-H1 | In vivo | Glioma (U-87 MG and D54) and murine glioma (C6) cells | [ |
aUnless specified otherwise, all cell lines are human in origin
Fig. 1MAPK signalling pathways (Adopted from [100])
Fig. 2Cell cycle in eukaryotic (adopted from [147])
Fig. 3Structure represents features of Bcl-2 family proteins including anti-apoptotic and pro-apoptotic (adopted from [181])