| Literature DB >> 30861422 |
Bohan Ma1, Fan Niu1, Xiaoyan Qu2, Wangxiao He1, Chao Feng2, Simeng Wang2, Zhenlin Ouyang2, Jin Yan3, Yurong Wen2, Dan Xu1, Yongping Shao2, Peter X Ma4, Wuyuan Lu5.
Abstract
A major pharmacological barrier to peptide therapeutics is their susceptibility to proteolytic degradation and poor membrane permeability, which, in principle, can be overcome by nanoparticle-based delivery technologies. Proteins, by definition, are nano materials and have been clinically proven as an efficient delivery vehicle for small molecule drugs. Here we describe the design of a protein-based peptide drug carrier derived from the tetramerization domain of the chimeric oncogenic protein Bcr/Abl of chronic myeloid leukemia. A dodecameric peptide inhibitor of the p53-MDM2/MDMX interaction, termed PMI, was grafted to the N-terminal helical region of Bcr/Abl tetramer. To antagonize intracellular MDM2/MDMX for p53 activation, we extended this protein, PMIBcr/Abl, by a C-terminal Arg-repeating hexapeptide to facilitate its cellular uptake. The resultant tetrameric protein PMIBcr/Abl-R6 adopted an alpha-helical conformation in solution and bound to MDM2 at an affinity of 32 nM. PMIBcr/Abl-R6 effectively induced apoptosis of HCT116 p53+/+ cells in vitro in a p53-dependent manner and potently inhibited tumor growth in a nude mouse xenograft model by stabilizing p53 in vivo. Our protein-based delivery strategy thus provides a clinically viable solution to p53-inspired anticancer therapy and is likely applicable to the development of many other peptide therapeutics to target a great variety of intracellular protein-protein interactions responsible for disease initiation and progression.Entities:
Keywords: Anticancer peptides; Bcr/Abl; MDM2; Peptide drug delivery; Protein therapeutics; p53
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30861422 PMCID: PMC6441627 DOI: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2019.03.004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomaterials ISSN: 0142-9612 Impact factor: 12.479