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C-Terminal p53 Palindromic Tetrapeptide Restores Full Apoptotic Function to Mutant p53 Cancer Cells In Vitro and In Vivo

We previously demonstrated that a synthetic monomer peptide derived from the C-terminus of p53 (aa 361–382) induced preferential apoptosis in mutant p53 malignant cells, but not normal cells. The major problem with the peptide was its short half-life (half-life < 10 min.) due to a random coil top...

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Autores principales: Fine, Robert L., Mao, Yuehua, Dinnen, Richard, Rosal, Ramon V., Raffo, Anthony, Hochfeld, Uri, Senatus, Patrick, Bruce, Jeffrey N., Nichols, Gwen, Wang, Hsin, Li, Yongliang, Brandt-Rauf, Paul W.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9855826/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36672645
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines11010137
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author Fine, Robert L.
Mao, Yuehua
Dinnen, Richard
Rosal, Ramon V.
Raffo, Anthony
Hochfeld, Uri
Senatus, Patrick
Bruce, Jeffrey N.
Nichols, Gwen
Wang, Hsin
Li, Yongliang
Brandt-Rauf, Paul W.
author_facet Fine, Robert L.
Mao, Yuehua
Dinnen, Richard
Rosal, Ramon V.
Raffo, Anthony
Hochfeld, Uri
Senatus, Patrick
Bruce, Jeffrey N.
Nichols, Gwen
Wang, Hsin
Li, Yongliang
Brandt-Rauf, Paul W.
author_sort Fine, Robert L.
collection PubMed
description We previously demonstrated that a synthetic monomer peptide derived from the C-terminus of p53 (aa 361–382) induced preferential apoptosis in mutant p53 malignant cells, but not normal cells. The major problem with the peptide was its short half-life (half-life < 10 min.) due to a random coil topology found in 3D proton NMR spectroscopy studies. To induce secondary/tertiary structures to produce more stability, we developed a peptide modelled after the tetrameric structure of p53 essential for activation of target genes. Starting with the above monomer peptide (aa 361–382), we added the nuclear localization sequence of p53 (aa 353–360) and the end of the C-terminal sequence (aa 383–393), resulting in a monomer spanning aa 353–393. Four monomers were linked by glycine to maximize flexibility and in a palindromic order that mimics p53 tetramer formation with four orthogonal alpha helices, which is required for p53 transactivation of target genes. This is now known as the 4 repeat-palindromic-p53 peptide or (4R-Pal-p53p). We explored two methods for testing the activity of the palindromic tetrapeptide: (1) exogenous peptide with a truncated antennapedia carrier (Ant) and (2) a doxycycline (Dox) inducer for endogenous expression. The exogenous peptide, 4R-Pal-p53p-Ant, contained a His tag at the N-terminal and a truncated 17aa Ant at the C-terminal. Exposure of human breast cancer MB-468 cells and human skin squamous cell cancer cells (both with mutant p53, 273 Arg->His) with purified peptide at 7 µM and 15 µM produced 52% and 75%, cell death, respectively. Comparatively, the monomeric p53 C-terminal peptide-Ant (aa 361–382, termed p53p-Ant), at 15 µM and 30 µM induced 15% and 24% cell death, respectively. Compared to the p53p-Ant, the exogenous 4R-pal-p53p-Ant was over five-fold more potent for inducing apoptosis at an equimolar concentration (15 µM). Endogenous 4R-Pal-p53p expression (without Ant), induced by Dox, resulted in 43% cell death in an engineered MB468 breast cancer stable cell line, while endogenous p53 C-terminal monomeric peptide expression produced no cell death due to rapid peptide degradation. The mechanism of apoptosis from 4R-Pal-p53p involved the extrinsic and intrinsic pathways (FAS, caspase-8, Bax, PUMA) for apoptosis, as well as increasing reactive oxygen species (ROS). All three death pathways were induced from transcriptional/translational activation of pro-apoptotic genes. Additionally, mRNA of p53 target genes (Bax and Fas) increased 14-fold and 18-fold, respectively, implying that the 4R-Pal-p53p restored full apoptotic potential to mutant p53. Monomeric p53p only increased Fas expression without a transcriptional or translational increase in Fas, and other genes and human marrow stem cell studies revealed no toxicity to normal stem cells for granulocytes, erythrocytes, monocytes, and macrophages (CFU-GEMM). Additionally, the peptide specifically targeted pre-malignant and malignant cells with mutant p53 and was not toxic to normal cells with basal levels of WT p53.
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spelling pubmed-98558262023-01-21 C-Terminal p53 Palindromic Tetrapeptide Restores Full Apoptotic Function to Mutant p53 Cancer Cells In Vitro and In Vivo Fine, Robert L. Mao, Yuehua Dinnen, Richard Rosal, Ramon V. Raffo, Anthony Hochfeld, Uri Senatus, Patrick Bruce, Jeffrey N. Nichols, Gwen Wang, Hsin Li, Yongliang Brandt-Rauf, Paul W. Biomedicines Article We previously demonstrated that a synthetic monomer peptide derived from the C-terminus of p53 (aa 361–382) induced preferential apoptosis in mutant p53 malignant cells, but not normal cells. The major problem with the peptide was its short half-life (half-life < 10 min.) due to a random coil topology found in 3D proton NMR spectroscopy studies. To induce secondary/tertiary structures to produce more stability, we developed a peptide modelled after the tetrameric structure of p53 essential for activation of target genes. Starting with the above monomer peptide (aa 361–382), we added the nuclear localization sequence of p53 (aa 353–360) and the end of the C-terminal sequence (aa 383–393), resulting in a monomer spanning aa 353–393. Four monomers were linked by glycine to maximize flexibility and in a palindromic order that mimics p53 tetramer formation with four orthogonal alpha helices, which is required for p53 transactivation of target genes. This is now known as the 4 repeat-palindromic-p53 peptide or (4R-Pal-p53p). We explored two methods for testing the activity of the palindromic tetrapeptide: (1) exogenous peptide with a truncated antennapedia carrier (Ant) and (2) a doxycycline (Dox) inducer for endogenous expression. The exogenous peptide, 4R-Pal-p53p-Ant, contained a His tag at the N-terminal and a truncated 17aa Ant at the C-terminal. Exposure of human breast cancer MB-468 cells and human skin squamous cell cancer cells (both with mutant p53, 273 Arg->His) with purified peptide at 7 µM and 15 µM produced 52% and 75%, cell death, respectively. Comparatively, the monomeric p53 C-terminal peptide-Ant (aa 361–382, termed p53p-Ant), at 15 µM and 30 µM induced 15% and 24% cell death, respectively. Compared to the p53p-Ant, the exogenous 4R-pal-p53p-Ant was over five-fold more potent for inducing apoptosis at an equimolar concentration (15 µM). Endogenous 4R-Pal-p53p expression (without Ant), induced by Dox, resulted in 43% cell death in an engineered MB468 breast cancer stable cell line, while endogenous p53 C-terminal monomeric peptide expression produced no cell death due to rapid peptide degradation. The mechanism of apoptosis from 4R-Pal-p53p involved the extrinsic and intrinsic pathways (FAS, caspase-8, Bax, PUMA) for apoptosis, as well as increasing reactive oxygen species (ROS). All three death pathways were induced from transcriptional/translational activation of pro-apoptotic genes. Additionally, mRNA of p53 target genes (Bax and Fas) increased 14-fold and 18-fold, respectively, implying that the 4R-Pal-p53p restored full apoptotic potential to mutant p53. Monomeric p53p only increased Fas expression without a transcriptional or translational increase in Fas, and other genes and human marrow stem cell studies revealed no toxicity to normal stem cells for granulocytes, erythrocytes, monocytes, and macrophages (CFU-GEMM). Additionally, the peptide specifically targeted pre-malignant and malignant cells with mutant p53 and was not toxic to normal cells with basal levels of WT p53. MDPI 2023-01-05 /pmc/articles/PMC9855826/ /pubmed/36672645 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines11010137 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Fine, Robert L.
Mao, Yuehua
Dinnen, Richard
Rosal, Ramon V.
Raffo, Anthony
Hochfeld, Uri
Senatus, Patrick
Bruce, Jeffrey N.
Nichols, Gwen
Wang, Hsin
Li, Yongliang
Brandt-Rauf, Paul W.
C-Terminal p53 Palindromic Tetrapeptide Restores Full Apoptotic Function to Mutant p53 Cancer Cells In Vitro and In Vivo
title C-Terminal p53 Palindromic Tetrapeptide Restores Full Apoptotic Function to Mutant p53 Cancer Cells In Vitro and In Vivo
title_full C-Terminal p53 Palindromic Tetrapeptide Restores Full Apoptotic Function to Mutant p53 Cancer Cells In Vitro and In Vivo
title_fullStr C-Terminal p53 Palindromic Tetrapeptide Restores Full Apoptotic Function to Mutant p53 Cancer Cells In Vitro and In Vivo
title_full_unstemmed C-Terminal p53 Palindromic Tetrapeptide Restores Full Apoptotic Function to Mutant p53 Cancer Cells In Vitro and In Vivo
title_short C-Terminal p53 Palindromic Tetrapeptide Restores Full Apoptotic Function to Mutant p53 Cancer Cells In Vitro and In Vivo
title_sort c-terminal p53 palindromic tetrapeptide restores full apoptotic function to mutant p53 cancer cells in vitro and in vivo
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9855826/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36672645
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines11010137
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