Azurin, a member of the cupredoxin family of copper containing redox proteins, preferentially penetrates human cancer cells and exerts cytostatic and cytotoxic (apoptotic) effects with no apparent activity on normal cells. Amino acids 50 to 77 (p28) of azurin seem responsible for cellular penetration and at least part of the antiproliferative, proapoptotic activity of azurin against a number of solid tumor cell lines. We show by confocal microscopy and fluorescence-activated cell sorting that amino acids 50 to 67 (p18) are a minimal motif (protein transduction domain) responsible for the preferential entry of azurin into human cancer cells. A combination of inhibitors that interfere with discrete steps of the endocytotic process and antibodies for caveolae and Golgi-mediated transport revealed that these amphipathic, A-helical peptides are unique. Unlike the cationic cell-penetrating peptides, A-helical antennapedialike, or VP22 type peptides, p18 and p28 are not bound by cell membrane glycosaminoglycans and preferentially penetrate cancer cells via endocytotic, caveosome-directed, and caveosome-independent pathways. Once internalized, p28, but not p18, inhibits cancer cell proliferation initially through a cytostatic mechanism. These observations suggest the azurin fragments, p18 and p28, account for the preferential entry of azurin into human cancer cells and a significant amount of the antiproliferative activity of azurin on human cancer cells, respectively. [Cancer Res 2009;69(2):537-46]
We report that amino acids 50 to 77 of azurin (p28) preferentially enter the human breast cancer cell lines MCF-7, ZR-75-1, and T47D through a caveolin-mediated pathway. Although p28 enters p53 wild-type MCF-7 and the isogenic p53 dominant-negative MDD2 breast cancer cell lines, p28 only induces a G 2 -M-phase cell cycle arrest and apoptosis in MCF-7 cells. p28 exerts its antiproliferative activity by reducing proteasomal degradation of p53 through formation of a p28:p53 complex within a hydrophobic DNA-binding domain (amino acids 80-276), increasing p53 levels and DNA-binding activity. Subsequent elevation of the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors p21 and p27 reduces cyclin-dependent kinase 2 and cyclin A levels in a time-dependent manner in MCF-7 cells but not in MDD2 cells. These results suggest that p28 and similar peptides that significantly reduce proteasomal degradation of p53 by a MDM2-independent pathway(s) may provide a unique series of cytostatic and cytotoxic (apoptotic) chemotherapeutic agents.
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