journal article
Bax-derived membrane-active peptides act as potent and direct inducers of apoptosis in cancer cells
Abstract
SUMMARYAlthough many cancer cells are primed for apoptosis, they usually develop resistance to cell death at multiple levels. Permeabilization of the outer mitochondrial membrane, which is mediated by proapoptotic Bcl-2 family members like Bax, is considered as a point-of-no-return for initiating apoptotic cell death. This crucial role has placed Bcl-2 family proteins as recurrent targets for anticancer drug development. Here, we propose and demonstrate a new concept based on using minimal active version of Bax to induce cell death independently of endogenous Bcl-2 proteins. We show that membrane-active segments of Bax can directly induce the release of mitochondria-residing apoptogenic factors and commit tumor cells promptly and irreversibly to caspase-dependent apoptosis. On this basis, we designed a peptide encompassing part of the Bax pore-forming domain, able to target mitochondria, induce cytochrome c release and trigger caspase-dependent apoptosis. Moreover, this Bax-derived poropeptide produced effective tumor regression after peritumoral injection in a nude mouse xenograft model. Thus, peptides derived from proteins evolutionary functionalized to form pores in the mitochondrial outer membrane represent novel templates for anticancer agents- journal article
- Animals
- Antineoplastic Agents
- chemistry
- metabolism
- pharmacology
- Apoptosis
- drug effects
- Cell Line, Tumor
- Cytochromes c
- metabolism
- Humans
- Mice
- Mitochondria
- drug effects
- metabolism
- Neoplasms
- drug therapy
- physiopathology
- Peptides
- chemistry
- genetics
- metabolism
- pharmacology
- Protein Structure, Tertiary
- bcl-2-Associated X Protein
- chemistry
- genetics
- metabolism
- pharmacology
- apoptosis
- Bcl-2 family
- proapoptotic Bax
- mitochondria
- pore-forming peptides
- anticancer agent
- antivascular therapy