| Literature DB >> 32705178 |
Wararat Chiangjong1, Somchai Chutipongtanate1, Suradej Hongeng2.
Abstract
Cancer is currently ineffectively treated using therapeutic drugs, and is also able to resist drug action, resulting in increased side effects following drug treatment. A novel therapeutic strategy against cancer cells is the use of anticancer peptides (ACPs). The physicochemical properties, amino acid composition and the addition of chemical groups on the ACP sequence influences their conformation, net charge and orientation of the secondary structure, leading to an effect on targeting specificity and ACP‑cell interaction, as well as peptide penetrating capability, stability and efficacy. ACPs have been developed from both naturally occurring and modified peptides by substituting neutral or anionic amino acid residues with cationic amino acid residues, or by adding a chemical group. The modified peptides lead to an increase in the effectiveness of cancer therapy. Due to this effectiveness, ACPs have recently been improved to form drugs and vaccines, which have sequentially been evaluated in various phases of clinical trials. The development of the ACPs remains focused on generating newly modified ACPs for clinical application in order to decrease the incidence of new cancer cases and decrease the mortality rate. The present review could further facilitate the design of ACPs and increase efficacious ACP therapy in the near future.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32705178 PMCID: PMC7384845 DOI: 10.3892/ijo.2020.5099
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Oncol ISSN: 1019-6439 Impact factor: 5.650
Figure 1Comparisons of membrane characteristics and anticancer peptides action on healthy cells (left) and cancer cells (right). The outer leaflet of the healthy cell membrane presents a neutral net charge leading to non-interaction of anticancer peptides on the healthy cell surface (left), whereas negative net charge on the outer leaflet of the cancer cell membrane could interact with the cationic anticancer peptides (right). In cancer cells, anticancer peptides, particularly in the α-helical form, act as molecularly targeted peptides that can penetrate and directly bind to the specific cancer cell or organelle membranes promoting cancer cell apoptosis. While, binding peptides linking to the anticancer drugs that have no anticancer property, can recognize and penetrate the cancer cell membrane. pHe, extracellular pH.
Role of amino acid residues on ACP effects in cancer cells, based on previous reports.
| Amino acid residue | Amino acid properties | Action on cancer cells | (Refs.) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Charged residues on ACPs | |||
| Lysine Arginine | Positively charged (basic amino acids), | Disrupt cell membrane integrity and penetrate cell membrane, leading to cancer cell cytotoxicity | ( |
| Histidine | polar, hydrophilic | Induce cancer cytotoxicity via membrane permeability under acidic condition | ( |
| Glutamic acid Aspartic acid | Negatively charged (acidic amino acids), polar, hydrophilic | Antiproliferative activity on tumor cells | ( |
| Effect on cancer cell structure | |||
| Cysteine | Polar, non-charged | On numerous cell surface receptors for stabilizing and maintaining extracellular motif/domain structure | ( |
| Proline | Non-polar, aliphatic residues | Membrane interaction and conformational flexibility, may be able to increase cytotoxic activity | ( |
| Glycine | Membrane interaction and conformational flexibility | ( | |
| Phenylalanine | Aromatic | Enhance the affinity for target cancer cell membrane, act as protective amino acids of primary tumors and may be able to increase cytotoxic activity | ( |
| Effect on cancer cell metabolism | |||
| Methionine | Polar, non-charged | Reduced methionine will arrest cancer cell proliferation | ( |
| Tyrosine | Aromatic | May be able to increase cytotoxic activity | ( |
| Tryptophan | Serve a role in the toxicity of some ACPs to cancer cells, entering cancer cells following an endocytic pathway and then binding at the major groove of nuclear DNA | ( |
ACP, anticancer peptides.
Figure 2Modification of natural peptides. The natural peptide conformations included the extended, the coiled and/or the α-helical forms with neutral, anionic or cationic properties. These natural peptides are modified by adding the chemical groups (such as acyl and methyl groups) or the positive amino acid residues (such as lysine and arginine) to increase positive net charge and specificity for cancer cell targets. Moreover, the addition, deletion or substitution of the amino acid residues changes the conformation from the extended or coiled peptides to the α-helix form for higher cancer cell penetration. After modification, the cationic α-helix modified peptide exhibits higher efficacy and specificity to the cancer cells.
Examples of natural peptides against cancer cells.
| Source | Name | Sequence | Net charge | Structure | Against cancer cell types | Biological mechanism | (Refs.) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RK1 | IDCSKVNLTAECSS | -1 | α-helix | IGR39, U87 cells | Reduce cell proliferation and migration | ( | |
| Cancer stem-like cells | EpCAM peptide-CTLs | VVAGIVVLV | 0 | Extend | EpCAM-expressing HepG2 cells | Inhibit tumor growth and induce specific immune response | ( |
| Cancer stem-like cells | CD44 peptide-specific CTLs | YIFYTFSTV | 0 | Extend | CD44 positive MCF-7 tumor cells | Kill tumor cells | ( |
| Tyrosine-protein kinase Lck | Lck-486 peptide | TFDYLRSVL | 0 | α-helix | Some metastatic tumor cells and T-cells at the tumor site | Inhibit tumor cell growth | ( |
| Bombinin-BO1 | GIGSAILSAGKSIIKGLAKGLAEHF | +2 | α-helix/coil | Human hepatoma cell lines (Hep G2, SK-HEP-1 and Huh7) | Anti-proliferative effects | ( | |
| Bombinin H-BO1 | IIGPVLGLVGKALGGLL | +1 | α-helix/coil | Human hepatoma cell lines (Hep G2, SK-HEP-1 and Huh7) | Anti-proliferative effects | ( | |
| BP100 | KKLFKKILKYL | +5 | α-helix | K562 cells | Promote LDH release | ( | |
| A specific Eps8/EGFR inhibitor | Peptide 327 | EFLDCFQKF | -1 | α-helix | HT-29 cells | Immune response to tumor cell recognition | ( |
| YVPGP | 0 | Coil | Prostate cancer DU-145 cells | Increase apoptosis via pro-apoptotic proteins | ( |
Predicted using PepDraw (http://www.tulane.edu/~biochem/WW/PepDraw/index.html).
Predicted using PEP-FOLD 3.5 (144,145). BO, Bombina orientalis; CTLs, Cytotoxic T lymphocytes; EpCAM, Epithelial cellular adhesion molecule.
Figure 3Conformation of anticancer peptides predicted using PEP-FOLD 3.5 (https://mobyle.rpbs.univ-paris-diderot.fr/cgi-bin/portal.py#forms::PEP-FOLD3). (A) Natural, (B) modified and (C) targeting peptides corresponding to Tables II-IV, respectively, performed in three conformations including extend (black alphabet amino acid sequences), coiled (blue alphabet amino acid sequences) and α-helix (red alphabet amino acid sequences).
Examples of modified peptides against cancer cells.
| Source | Name | Sequence | Property | Structure | Against cancer cell types | (Refs.) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| S1 (Ac-KKWRKWLAKK-NH2) | Nal2-S1 | Ac-Nal-Nal-KKWRKWLAKK-NH2 | Cationic peptides | Amphipathic α-helical peptides | OECM-1, C9, SAS, A549, PC9, PC9-G | ( |
| PFV | CALNNPFVYLI | Neutral | Coil/extendb α-helical peptides | B16, A549 | ( | |
| B4 | LKKLFKKILKYL | Cationic peptides | α-helical peptides | K562 | ( | |
| Carcinoembryonic antigen glypican-3 | GPC3( | FVGEFFTDV | Anionic peptides | Coil/α-helical peptides | The HLA-A 02:01 human cancer cell lines, HepG2, Wilm's tumor G-401, SK-N-DZ, HuH-6 | ( |
| Transactivator of transcript-DV1-Bcl-2 homology 3 | TAT-DV1-BH3 polypeptide | RRRQR RKKRG GGGLGASW HRPDK CCLGY QKRRL PGGGLRRMA DDLNA QY | Cationic peptide | α-helical-coil- α-helical peptide | MDAMB-231 and MCF-7 | ( |
Predicted using PepDraw (http://www.tulane.edu/~biochem/WW/PepDraw/index.html).
Predicted using PEP-FOLD 3.5 (160,161). Nal, β-naphthylalanine; Ac, Acyl group; GPC, glypican; BH3, Bcl-2 homology 3.
Examples of targeting peptides bind to specific cancer cells.
| Name | Sequence | Net charge | Structure | Targeting cancer cell types | (Refs.) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CSP-GD | GDALFSVPLEVY | -2 | Extend/coil Coil Coil | Human cervical cancer derived cells (SiH) | ( |
| CSP-SI | SIDDQRDVAEFA | -3 | Coil/α-helix Coil/α-helix Coil/α-helix | Human cervical cancer derived cells (C-33A) Neuroblastoma and breast ( | ( |
| Polyarginine (R11) | RRRRRRRRRRR | +11 | α-helix | Bladder cancer | ( |
| DN-C16orf74 | RRRRRRRRRRR-GGG-KHLDVPVIVIPPTPT | +11 | α-helix-coli-extend | Pancreatic cancer cells | ( |
| α-helix HSP70 peptide | ACFAEKFKEAVKDYFAKFWD-GSG-TKDNNLLGRFELSG | 0 | α-helix-coli-extend | Tumor regression on mice B16OVA melanoma models | ( |
Predicted using PepDraw (http://www.tulane.edu/~biochem/WW/PepDraw/index.html).
Predicted using PEP-FOLD 3.5 (160,161). CSP, cancer-specific targeting peptide; HSP, heat shock protein.
Figure 4Number of ACP studies for the drug and biological intervention. (A) Frequency of cancer types from 792 ACP studies, which were submitted on the ClinicalTrials.gov website, including 36 cancer types and unclassified cancer types. The unclassified cancer types were reported as solid tumors, cancer or neoplasms. (B) Number of ACP studies in every 5-year period between 1995-2019 was continuously increased. (C) Furthermore, from 1995-2019, >98% of these ACP studies were an intervention study type, including clinical trial in early phase I, phase I, I/II, II, II/III, III, IV and not applicable, while <2% of them were an observation study type, which cannot assign a specific intervention or treatment. Source:www.clinicaltrials.gov search on Feb 4, 2020 with drug, biological and peptide key words in cancer. ACP, anticancer peptide.
Examples of ACPs in clinical trials (source: www.ClinicalTrials.gov).
| Phases | Biological peptides | Conditions | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Early phase 1 | MUC-1 peptide vaccine, poly ICLC, MUC1 peptide-poly-ICLC adjuvant vaccine | Breast cancer | A positive anti-MUC1 antibody response |
| HER-2/neu peptide vaccine | Breast cancer | Peptide-specific interferon-γ producing T-cell and peptide-specific IL-5 producing T-cell responses | |
| GAA/TT-peptide vaccine and poly-ICLC | Astrocytoma, oligoastrocytoma, glioma | Induction of GAA-specific T-cell response | |
| Peptide vaccine + poly-ICLC | Astrocytoma, oligoastrocytoma, oligodendroglioma | Infiltration of GAA-specific T-cells | |
| Gag:267-274 peptide vaccine | Melanoma | Vaccine peptide-specific CTL response | |
| Phase 1 | HPV16 E7 peptide-pulsed autologous DCs | Cervical cancer | Pulsed autologous DCs immunotherapy |
| NY-ESO-1b peptide plus CpG 7909 and Montanide ISA-5 | Cancer, neoplasm | NY-ESO-1 specific humoral and cellular immunity | |
| Antiangiogenic peptide vaccine | Hepatocellular carcinoma | Peptide specific CTL response | |
| RNF43-721 | Colorectal cancer | Specific CTL induction | |
| LY6K, VEGFR1, VEGFR2 | Esophageal cancer | Immune responses including LY6K, VEGFR1 and VEGFR2 specific T-cells | |
| HLA-A*0201 or HLA-A*0206- restricted URLC10 peptides | Non-small cell lung cancer | Immunological responses including peptides specific CTL, antigen cascade, regulatory T-cells, cancer antigens and HLA levels. | |
| Phase 1/Phase 2 | MAGE-3.A1 peptide and CpG 7909 | Malignant melanoma | Detectable CTL response |
| VEGFR1-1084, VEGFR2-169 | Pancreatic cancer | Peptide specific CTL response | |
| HER-2/neu peptide vaccine | Breast cancer | HER2-specific T-cell response | |
| HLA-A*2402 or A*0201 restricted peptides | Solid tumors | Various immunological responses including peptides specific CTL, antigen cascade, regulatory T-cells, cancer antigens and HLA levels | |
| Modified CEA peptide | Pancreatic adenocarcinoma | T-cell response with modified CEA peptide | |
| Phase 2 | synthetic human papillomavirus 16 E6 peptide | Cervical cancer | Immunological response to HPV |
| gp100:209-217(210M), HPV 16 | Melanoma | T-cell immunity to gp100 peptide and to | |
| E7:12-20 | E7 12-20 papilloma virus peptide | ||
| WT1 126-134 peptide | Acute myeloid leukemia | Generation of T-cell response | |
| G250 peptide | Metastatic renal cell carcinoma | G250-specific CTL response | |
| Melanoma helper peptide vaccine, multi-epitope melanoma peptide vaccine | Melanoma | CTL response, helper T-cells response to 6MHP | |
| Phase 3 | PR1 leukemia peptide vaccine | Leukemia | Immune response to PR1-HLA-A2 tetramer |
| Phase 4 | Degarelix (LHRH antagonist) | Prostatic neoplasms | Binds to GnRH receptors and blocks interaction with GnRH |
From ClinicalTrials.gov searched on January 31, 2020. CTL, cytotoxic T-cell lymphocytes; GnRH, gonadotropin-releasing hormone; CEA, carcinoembryonic antigen; HPV, human papillomavirus; HER, human epidermal growth factor receptor; VEGFR, vascular endothelial growth factor receptor; MAGE-3, melanoma-associated antigen 3; RNF, ring finger protein; NY-ESO, New York esophageal squamous cell carcinoma; MUC, mucin.