TAT-apoptin is efficiently delivered and induces apoptosis in cancer cells
- 22 December 2003
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Oncogene
- Vol. 23 (5) , 1153-1165
- https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.onc.1207224
Abstract
Apoptin has been described to induce apoptosis in various human cancer cell lines, but not in normal cells, thus making it an interesting candidate for the development of novel therapeutic strategies. Apoptin was generated and cloned into several mammalian expression vectors. Transfection or microinjection of apoptin cDNA resulted in its expression, initially in the cytoplasm with a filamentous pattern. Subsequently, apoptin entered the nucleus and efficiently induced apoptosis in several cancer cell lines. Nuclear localization was shown to be required for induction of apoptosis. Apoptin expression level was found to be an important determinant of the efficiency of induction of apoptosis. Surprisingly, expression of apoptin or GFP-apoptin cDNA induced apoptosis in some normal cells. When fused to the HIV-TAT protein transduction domain and delivered as a protein, TAT-apoptin was transduced efficiently (>90%) into normal and tumour cells. However, TAT-apoptin remained in the cytoplasm and did not kill normal 6689 and 1BR3 fibroblasts. In contrast TAT-apoptin migrated from the cytoplasm to the nucleus of Saos-2 and HSC-3 cancer cells resulting in apoptosis after 24 h. This study shows that apoptin is a powerful apoptosis-inducing protein with a potential for cancer therapy.Keywords
This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- Importance of Nuclear Localization of Apoptin for Tumor-specific Induction of ApoptosisJournal of Biological Chemistry, 2003
- E1A-mediated suppression of EGFR expression and induction of apoptosis in head and neck squamous carcinoma cell linesOncogene, 2003
- TAT-Mediated Protein Transduction into Mammalian CellsMethods, 2001
- Protein transduction: an alternative to genetic intervention?Gene Therapy, 2001
- The effect of Bcl-2 on Apoptin in 'normal' vs transformed human cellsLeukemia, 1999
- Transduction of full-length TAT fusion proteins into mammalian cells: TAT-p27Kip1 induces cell migrationNature Medicine, 1998
- Caspase-3 Is Required for DNA Fragmentation and Morphological Changes Associated with ApoptosisJournal of Biological Chemistry, 1998
- Apoptin induces apoptosis in human transformed and malignant cells but not in normal cellsProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1997
- ApoptosisImmunology Today, 1993
- Characterization of viral DNAs from cells infected with chicken anaemia agent: sequence analysis of the cloned replicative form and transfection capabilities of cloned genome fragmentsArchiv für die gesamte Virusforschung, 1992