Back to Search Start Over

Antiproliferative Effect of pHLIP-Amanitin.

Authors :
Moshnikova, Anna
Moshnikova, Valentina
Andreev, Oleg A.
Reshetnyak, Yana K.
Source :
Biochemistry. 2/19/2013, Vol. 52 Issue 7, p1171-1178. 8p.
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

Toxins could be effective anticancer drugs, if their selective delivery into cancer cells could be achieved. We have shown that the energy of membrane-associated folding of water-soluble membrane peptides of the pHLIP (pH low insertion peptide) family could be used to move cell-impermeable cargo across the lipid bilayer into the cytoplasm of cancer cells. Here we present the results of a study of pHLIP-mediated cellular delivery of a polar cell-impermeable toxin, α-amanitin, an inhibitor of RNA polymerase II. We show that pHLIP can deliver α-amanitin into cells in a pH-dependent fashion and induce cell death within 48 h. Translocation capability could be tuned by conjugating amanitin to the C-terminus of pHLIP via linkers of different hydrophobicities that could be cleaved in the cytoplasm. pHLIP-SPDP-amanitin, which exhibits 4-5 times higher antiproliferative ability at pH 6 than at pH 7.4, was selected as the best construct. The major mechanism of amanitin delivery is direct translocation (flip) across a membrane by pHLIP and cleavage of the S-S bond in the cytoplasm. The antiproliferative effect was monitored on four different human cancer cell lines. pHLIP-mediated cytoplasmic delivery of amanitin could create great opportunities to use the toxin as a potent pH-selective anticancer agent, which predominantly targets highly proliferative cancer cells at low extracellular pH values. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00062960
Volume :
52
Issue :
7
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Biochemistry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
86252326
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/bi301647y