Boosting antitumor drug efficacy with chemically engineered multidomain proteins
peer-reviewed
Erstveröffentlichung
2018-06-14Authors
Kuan, Seah Ling
Fischer, Stephan
Hafner, Susanne
Wang, Tao
Syrovets, Tatiana
Wissenschaftlicher Artikel
Published in
Advanced Science ; 5 (2018), 8. - Art.-Nr. 1701036. - eISSN 2198-3844
Link to original publication
https://dx.doi.org/10.1002/advs.201701036Faculties
Fakultät für NaturwissenschaftenInstitutions
Institut für Anorganische Chemie I (Materialien und Katalyse)UKU. Institut für Pathologie
UKU. Institut für Naturheilkunde und Klinische Pharmakologie
UKU. Institut für Pharmakologie und Toxikologie
Document version
published version (publisher's PDF)Abstract
A facile chemical approach integrating supramolecular chemistry, site-selective protein chemistry, and molecular biology is described to engineer synthetic multidomain protein therapeutics that sensitize cancer cells selectively to significantly enhance antitumor efficacy of existing chemotherapeutics. The desired bioactive entities are assembled via supramolecular interactions at the nanoscale into structurally ordered multiprotein complexes comprising a) multiple copies of the chemically modified cyclic peptide hormone somatostatin for selective targeting and internalization into human A549 lung cancer cells expressing SST-2 receptors and b) a new cysteine mutant of the C3bot1 (C3) enzyme from Clostridium botulinum, a Rho protein inhibitor that affects and influences intracellular Rho-mediated processes like endothelial cell migration and blood vessel formation. The multidomain protein complex, SST3-Avi-C3, retargets C3 enzyme into non-small cell lung A549 cancer cells and exhibits exceptional tumor inhibition at a concentration ≈100-fold lower than the clinically approved antibody bevacizumab (Avastin) in vivo. Notably, SST3-Avi-C3 increases tumor sensitivity to a conventional chemotherapeutic (doxorubicin) in vivo. These findings show that the integrated approach holds vast promise to expand the current repertoire of multidomain protein complexes and can pave the way to important new developments in the area of targeted and combination cancer therapy.
EU Project uulm
BIOQ / Diamond Quantum Devices and Biology / EC / FP7 / 319130
DFG Project THU
SFB 1149 Teilprojekt A04 / Zelltypspezifische Trägerproteine für die gezielte pharmakologische Hemmung der Rho-/Aktin-abhängigen Leukozyten-Rekrutierung in den Alveolarraum nach stumpfem Thoraxtrauma / DFG / 251293561
SFB 1279 Teilprojekt C01 / Entwicklung und Synthese optimierter Peptid-Biohybride / DFG / 316249678
SFB 1279 Teilprojekt C02 / Biohybridtransporter zum zellspezifischen Transport und der kontrollierten Freisetzung von pharmakologisch aktiven Peptiden / DFG / 316249678
SFB 1279 Teilprojekt C01 / Entwicklung und Synthese optimierter Peptid-Biohybride / DFG / 316249678
SFB 1279 Teilprojekt C02 / Biohybridtransporter zum zellspezifischen Transport und der kontrollierten Freisetzung von pharmakologisch aktiven Peptiden / DFG / 316249678
Is supplemented by
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/action/downloadSupplement?doi=10.1002%2Fadvs.201701036&file=advs614-sup-0001-S1.pdfSubject headings
[GND]: Targeted drug delivery[LCSH]: Protein therapeutics (Wiley-VCH)
[Free subject headings]: chemically engineered proteins | combination oncotherapy | supramolecular fusion proteins | targeted delivery
[DDC subject group]: DDC 540 / Chemistry & allied sciences | DDC 620 / Engineering & allied operations
Metadata
Show full item recordDOI & citation
Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://dx.doi.org/10.18725/OPARU-48925
Kuan, Seah Ling et al. (2023): Boosting antitumor drug efficacy with chemically engineered multidomain proteins. Open Access Repositorium der Universität Ulm und Technischen Hochschule Ulm. http://dx.doi.org/10.18725/OPARU-48925
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