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PNC-27

Anticancer peptide PNC-27, Chimeric p53-penetratin peptide

Quick Stats
Studies 25
Trials 0
Score 3
2024 pubmed

Poptosis or Peptide-Induced Transmembrane Pore Formation: A Novel Way to Kill Cancer Cells without Affecting Normal Cells.

Pincus. Matthew R MR; Silberstein. Miriam M; Zohar. Nitzan N; Sarafraz-Yazdi. Ehsan E; Bowne. Wilbur B WB

Key Findings

  • PNC-27 binds to membrane‑bound HDM‑2, which is abundant on many cancer cells but low on normal cells.
  • Binding triggers the formation of transmembrane pores, leading to rapid tumor cell necrosis.
  • In mouse models, PNC-27 eliminated metastatic pancreatic cancer and stem‑cell‑rich leukemia, even when those cancers were resistant to chemotherapy.

Practical Outcomes

  • At this stage the peptide is only tested in animals and is not available for human use, so there are no dosage or protocol recommendations for self‑experimentation. However, the study highlights a novel, cancer‑specific mechanism that could become a future therapeutic option, and it suggests that targeting membrane HDM‑2 might be a safer way to kill tumors without harming normal tissue.

Summary

Scientists have created a short protein fragment called PNC-27 that sticks to a cancer‑specific marker (HDM‑2) on the outside of tumor cells. When it binds, it builds tiny holes in the cell membrane, causing the cancer cell to burst while leaving normal cells unharmed. In mouse studies it shrank aggressive pancreatic tumors and leukemia without obvious side effects.

Abstract

Recent advances in cancer treatment like personalized chemotherapy and immunotherapy are aimed at tumors that meet certain specifications. In this review, we describe a new approach to general cancer treatment, termed peptide-induced poptosis, in which specific peptides, e.g., PNC-27 and its shorter analogue, PNC-28, that contain the segment of the p53 transactivating 12-26 domain that bind to HDM-2 in its 1-109 domain, bind to HDM-2 in the membranes of cancer cells, resulting in transmembrane pore formation and the rapid extrusion of cancer cell contents, i.e., tumor cell necrosis. These peptides cause tumor cell necrosis of a wide variety of solid tissue and hematopoietic tumors but have no effect on the viability and growth of normal cells since they express at most low levels of membrane-bound HDM-2. They have been found to successfully treat a highly metastatic pancreatic tumor as well as stem-cell-enriched human acute myelogenous leukemias in nude mice, with no evidence of off-target effects. These peptides also are cytotoxic to chemotherapy-resistant cancers and to primary tumors. We performed high-resolution scanning immuno-electron microscopy and visualized the pores in cancer cells induced by PNC-27. This peptide forms 1:1 complexes with HDM-2 in a temperature-independent step, followed by dimerization of these complexes to form transmembrane channels in a highly temperature-dependent step parallel to the mode of action of other membranolytic but less specific agents like streptolysin. These peptides therefore may be effective as general anti-cancer agents.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2024

Date

2024-05-22T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.3390/biomedicines12061144

References

29