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PNC-27

Anticancer peptide PNC-27, Chimeric p53-penetratin peptide

Quick Stats
Studies 25
Trials 0
Score 2
2007 pubmed

Electronic structure and physicochemical properties characterization of the amino acids 12-26 of TP53: a theoretical study.

Barrientos-Salcedo. Carolina C; Arenas-Aranda. Diego D; Salamanca-Gómez. Fabio F; Ortiz-Muñiz. Rocío R; Soriano-Correa. Catalina C

Key Findings

  • Computational analysis identified L14, S15, T18, S20, L25, and L26 as key reactive sites.
  • Charge distribution and electrostatic potential maps highlight regions vulnerable to nucleophilic and electrophilic attacks.
  • Global reactivity descriptors (ionization potential, hardness, electrophilicity, HOMO‑LUMO gap) were quantified, suggesting a specific electronic profile linked to membrane‑lysis activity.

Practical Outcomes

  • The study doesn’t give dosage or safety advice, but it clarifies which parts of PNC‑27 may be crucial for its cancer‑cell killing action. Biohackers can use this insight to follow future research on peptide tweaks or to better understand experimental results, though no immediate protocol changes are recommended.

Summary

Scientists used computer models to map the electric charges and reactive spots on the cancer‑killing peptide PNC‑27. They found several amino acids that are likely to interact with cell membranes, which could explain how the peptide punches holes in tumor cells.

Abstract

PNC-27, a synthetic peptide, is derived from the TP53-HDM2 binding domain that include TP53 amino acids 12-26 linked with 17 amino acids from the antennapedia protein transference domain. This peptide induces membrane rupture in tumor cells through toroidal pores formation and has motivated several experimental studies; nonetheless, its mechanism of biological action remains unknown to date. Herein, we present a theoretical study at the Hartree-Fock and density functional theory (B3LYP) levels of theory of TP53 protein residues 12-26 (PPLSQETFSDLWKLL) in order to characterize its electronic structure and physicochemical properties. Our results for atomic and group charges, fitted to the electrostatic potential (ESP) show important reactive sites (L14, S15, T18, S20, L25, and L26), suggesting that these amino acids are exposed to nucleophilic and electrophilic attacks. Analysis of bond orders, intramolecular interactions and of several global reactivity descriptors, such as ionization potentials, hardness, electrophilicity index, dipole moments, total energies, frontier molecular orbitals (HOMO-LUMO), and electrostatic potential, led us to characterize active sites and the electronic structure and physiochemical features that taken together may be important in understanding the specific selectivity for this peptides type's cancer-cell membrane lysis properties.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2007

Date

2007-05-02T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1021/jp067841y