Chondroitin sulfate as a molecular portal that preferentially mediates the apoptotic killing of tumor cells by penetratin-directed mitochondria-disrupting peptides.
Yang. Hao H; Liu. Shan S; Cai. Huawei H; Wan. Lin L; Li. Shengfu S; Li. Youping Y; Cheng. Jingqiu J; Lu. Xiaofeng X
Key Findings
- Antp‑directed peptides (like PNC27) kill tumor cells at lower concentrations than normal cells.
- Replacing Antp with other cell‑penetrating peptides (TAT, R9, DPV3) removes the tumor‑selective effect.
- Antp‑directed peptides bind to chondroitin sulfate; higher CS levels on tumor cells increase peptide entry and cytotoxicity.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, this study mainly shows a molecular trick that cancer cells use to let certain peptides in. It isn’t a ready‑to‑use protocol for longevity or performance, but it hints that targeting CS could make anti‑cancer peptide therapies more selective in the future.
Summary
Researchers found that a peptide called penetratin (Antp) can carry a toxic payload into cells, and it does this more efficiently in cancer cells because those cells have extra chondroitin sulfate (CS) on their surface. When CS is removed, the peptide is less effective, showing that CS acts like a doorway for the peptide to enter and kill the cell.
Abstract
The use of cell-penetrating peptides (CPPs) as drug carriers for targeted therapy is limited by the unrestricted cellular translocation of CPPs. The preferential induction of tumor cell death by penetratin (Antp)-directed peptides (PNC27 and PNC28), however, suggests that the CPP Antp may contribute to the preferential cytotoxicity of these peptides. Using PNC27 as a molecular model, we constructed three novel peptides (PT, PR9, and PD3) by replacing the leader peptide Antp with one of three distinct CPPs (TAT, R9, or DPV3), respectively. The IC(50) values of PNC27 in tumor cells were 2-3 times lower than in normal cells. However, all three engineered peptides demonstrated similar cytotoxic effects in tumor and normal cells. Another three chimeric peptides containing the leader peptide Antp with different mitochondria-disrupting peptides (KLA-Antp (KGA), B27-Antp (BA27), and B28-Antp (BA28)), preferentially induced apoptosis in tumor cells. The IC(50) values of these peptides (3-10 microM) were 3-6 times lower in tumor cells than in normal cells. In contrast, TAT-directed peptides (TAT-KLA (TK), TAT-B27 (TB27), and TAT-B28 (TB28)), were cytotoxic to both tumor and normal cells. These data demonstrate that the leader peptide Antp contributes to the preferential cytotoxicity of Antp-directed peptides. Furthermore, Antp-directed peptides bind chondroitin sulfate (CS), and the removal of endogenous CS reduces the cytotoxic effects of Antp-directed peptides in tumor cells. The overexpression of CS in tumor cells is positively correlated to the cell entry and cytotoxicity of Antp- directed peptides. These results suggest that CS overexpression in tumor cells is an important molecular portal that mediates the preferential cytotoxicity of Antp-directed peptides.
Study Information
pubmed
2010
2010-05-18T00:00:00.000Z
10.1074/jbc.m109.089417