Artículos de revistas
Mechanisms of Cellular Uptake, Intracellular Transportation, and Degradation of CIGB-300, a Tat-Conjugated Peptide, in Tumor Cell Lines
Fecha
2014-04Registro en:
Gomez, Daniel Eduardo; Farina, Hernán Gabriel; Benavent Acero, Fernando Rodrigo; Alonso, Daniel Fernando; Perera Negrin, Yasser; Perea, Silvio E.; et al.; Mechanisms of Cellular Uptake, Intracellular Transportation, and Degradation of CIGB-300, a Tat-Conjugated Peptide, in Tumor Cell Lines; American Chemical Society; Molecular Pharmaceutics; 6; 11; 4-2014; 1798-1807
1543-8384
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Benavent Acero, Fernando Rodrigo
Perera Negrin, Yasser
Alonso, Daniel Fernando
Perea, Silvio E.
Gomez, Daniel Eduardo
Farina, Hernán Gabriel
Resumen
CIGB-300 is a cyclic synthetic peptide that induces apoptosis in malignant cells, elicits antitumor activity in cancer animal models, and shows tumor reduction signs when assayed in first-in-human phase I trial in patients with cervical tumors. CIGB-300 impairs phosphorylation by casein kinase 2 through targeting the substrate´s phosphoacceptor domain. CIGB-300 was linked to the cell penetrating peptide Tat to facilitate the delivery into cells. Previously, we showed that CIGB-300 had a differential antiproliferative behavior in different tumor cell lines. In this work, we studied differential antiproliferative behavior in terms of cellular uptake, intracellular transportation, and degradation in tumor cell lines with dissimilar sensitivity to CIGB-300. The internalization of CIGB-300 was studied in different malignant cell lines. We found that the cell membrane heparan sulfate proteoglycans act as main receptors for extracellular CIGB-300 uptake. The most sensitive tumor cell lines showed higher intracellular incorporation of CIGB-300 in comparison to less sensitive cell lines. Furthermore, CIGB-300 uptake is time- and concentration-dependent in all studied cell lines. It was shown that CIGB-300 has the ability to penetrate cells mainly by direct membrane translocation. However, a minor proportion of the peptide uses an energy-dependent endocytic pathway mechanism to gain access into cells. CIGB-300 is internalized and transported into cells preferentially by caveolae-mediated endocytosis. Lysosomes are involved in CIGB-300 degradation; highly sensitive cell lines showed degradation at earlier times compared to low sensitive cells. Altogether, our data suggests a mechanism of internalization, vesicular transportation, and degradation for CIGB-300 in tumor cells.