Background
Suppression of apoptosis is central to the development of cancer and is associated with resistance to modern adjuvant treatments.
Therefore, molecules and pathways of apoptotic processes are critical targets for the development of anti-cancer therapeutics.
Since apoptosis is executed by intracellular proteins, molecular approaches must incorporate a method to deliver the treatment
into the tumor cells.
Methods
We utilized a peptide that contains two domains, a peptide transduction domain derived from the HIV-1 TAT protein and a biological
effector domain, the BH3 domain from the pro-apoptotic Bcl-2 family member Bim. We examined whether this construct (TAT-Bim)
induced apoptosis in several cancer cell lines (T-cell lymphoma (EL4), pancreatic cancer (Panc-02), and melanoma (B16)) and
whether TAT-Bim treatment synergized with radiation. A mutant TAT-Bim peptide with no biologic activity (TAT-Bim-inactive)
was used as a control. C57/BL6 mice were challenged with syngeneic cancer cell lines and the effects of intratumoral TAT-Bim
injection on tumor growth and host survival were determined.
Results
TAT-Bim was internalized by all cancer cells within two hours. TAT-Bim resulted in apoptosis in a dose dependent fashion in
all cell lines and sublethal irradiation augmented the effects of TAT-Bim induced apoptosis. TAT-Bim significantly slowed
tumor growth in murine models of pancreatic cancer and melanoma.
Conclusion
TAT-Bim exemplifies a strategy for cancer therapy that involves inducing apoptosis by antagonizing the endogenous anti-apoptotic
machinery. Small peptide therapeutics, in combination with traditional adjuvant therapies such as radiation, may provide a
valuable ‘second hit’ and drive tumor cells into programmed cell death.
Keywords Apoptosis - Tat-fusion protein - Bim - Peptide therapeutic
This work was presented in part at the Annual Meeting of the Society for Surgical Oncology Cancer Forum, San Diego 2006