Faculty of Biology, Center for Protein Studies, University of Havana, Calle 25 #455 e/ J e I, Vedado, Ciudad de La Habana, Cuba.
Protein Eng Des Sel. 2011 Jun;24(6):485-93. doi: 10.1093/protein/gzr002. Epub 2011 Feb 4.
The use of pore-forming toxins from sea anemones (actinoporins) in the construction of immunotoxins (ITs) against tumour cells is an alternative for cancer therapy. However, the main disadvantage of actinoporin-based ITs obtained so far has been the poor cellular specificity associated with the toxin's ability to bind and exert its activity in almost any cell membrane. Our final goal is the construction of tumour proteinase-activated ITs using a cysteine mutant at the membrane binding region of sticholysin-I (StI), a cytolysin isolated from the sea anemone Stichodactyla helianthus. The mutant and the ligand moiety would be linked by proteinase-sensitive peptides through the StI cysteine residue blocking the toxin binding region and hence the IT non-specific killing activity. To accomplish this objective the first step was to obtain the mutant StI W111C, and to evaluate the impact of mutating tryptophan 111 by cysteine on the toxin pore-forming capacity. After proteolysis of the cleavage sequence, a short peptide would remain attached to the toxin. The next step was to evaluate whether this mutant is able to form pores even with a residual peptide linked to cysteine 111. In this work we demonstrated that (i) StI W111C shows pore-forming capacity in a nanomolar range, although it is 8-fold less active than the wild-type recombinant StI, corroborating the previously reported importance of residue 111 for the binding of StI to membranes, and (ii) the mutant is able to form pores even with a residual seven-residue peptide linked to cysteine 111. In addition, it was demonstrated that binding of a large molecule to cysteine 111 renders an inactive toxin that is no longer able to bind to the membrane. These results validate the mutant StI W111C for its use in the construction of tumour proteinase-activated ITs.
利用海葵(刺胞动物)中的成孔毒素(肌动蛋白)构建针对肿瘤细胞的免疫毒素(IT)是癌症治疗的一种替代方法。然而,到目前为止,基于肌动蛋白的 IT 的主要缺点是与毒素结合并使其在几乎任何细胞膜中发挥作用的能力相关的细胞特异性差。我们的最终目标是使用来自海葵 Stichodactyla helianthus 的细胞溶素 Sticholysin-I(StI)的膜结合区中的半胱氨酸突变体构建肿瘤蛋白酶激活的 IT。突变体和配体部分将通过蛋白酶敏感肽连接,通过 StI 半胱氨酸残基阻断毒素结合区,从而使 IT 非特异性杀伤活性丧失。为了实现这一目标,第一步是获得突变体 StI W111C,并评估突变色氨酸 111 为半胱氨酸对毒素成孔能力的影响。在切割序列的蛋白酶解后,短肽将保留在毒素上。下一步是评估即使与连接到半胱氨酸 111 的残留肽连接,这种突变体是否仍能形成孔。在这项工作中,我们证明了:(i)StI W111C 在纳摩尔范围内显示出成孔能力,尽管其活性比野生型重组 StI 低 8 倍,这证实了以前报道的残基 111 对 StI 与膜结合的重要性,以及(ii)即使与连接到半胱氨酸 111 的残留七肽连接,突变体也能够形成孔。此外,还证明了与半胱氨酸 111 结合的大分子使失活毒素无法再与膜结合。这些结果验证了突变体 StI W111C 可用于构建肿瘤蛋白酶激活的 IT。