Zang Xiao-Ping, Palwai Naveen R, Lerner Megan R, Brackett Daniel J, Pento J Thomas, Harrison Roger G
Department of Pharmaceutical Science, College of Pharmacy, University of Oklahoma, Health Sciences Center, 1110 N. Stonewall Ave., Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73117, USA.
Anticancer Res. 2006 May-Jun;26(3A):1745-51.
We previously reported that a novel fusion protein (consisting of an amino-terminal fragment of urokinase which binds to the urokinase receptor, and L-methioninase which depletes methionine and arrests the growth of methionine-dependent tumors) inhibited MCF-7 breast cancer cells in vitro.
We produced this fusion protein, L-methioninase, and a mutated fusion protein without L-methioninase activity by recombinant methods. MCF-7 cell proliferation and mobility were measured in vitro in a culture wounding assay. Protein binding to MCF-7 cells was measured by immunocytochemical localization. MCF-7 tumor xenograft growth was measured in nude mice.
The fusion protein was significantly more effective than L-methioninase in either the in vitro or in vivo assays. The binding assay showed that the unmutated and mutated fusion protein bound to the cells, but L-methioninase did not.
Our results suggest that this fusion protein has potential as a therapeutic agent for cancer treatment.