Standard

Comparative analysis of lactaptin activity when produced in bacterial or eukaryotic expression systems. / Koval, O. A.; Volkova, O. Y.; Gorchakov, A. A. и др.

в: Вавиловский журнал генетики и селекции, Том 21, № 7, 01.01.2017, стр. 764-769.

Результаты исследований: Научные публикации в периодических изданияхстатьяРецензирование

Harvard

Koval, OA, Volkova, OY, Gorchakov, AA, Kulemzin, SV, Tkachenko, AV, Nushtaeva, AA, Kuligina, EV, Richter, VA & Taranin, AV 2017, 'Comparative analysis of lactaptin activity when produced in bacterial or eukaryotic expression systems', Вавиловский журнал генетики и селекции, Том. 21, № 7, стр. 764-769. https://doi.org/10.18699/VJ17.292

APA

Koval, O. A., Volkova, O. Y., Gorchakov, A. A., Kulemzin, S. V., Tkachenko, A. V., Nushtaeva, A. A., Kuligina, E. V., Richter, V. A., & Taranin, A. V. (2017). Comparative analysis of lactaptin activity when produced in bacterial or eukaryotic expression systems. Вавиловский журнал генетики и селекции, 21(7), 764-769. https://doi.org/10.18699/VJ17.292

Vancouver

Koval OA, Volkova OY, Gorchakov AA, Kulemzin SV, Tkachenko AV, Nushtaeva AA и др. Comparative analysis of lactaptin activity when produced in bacterial or eukaryotic expression systems. Вавиловский журнал генетики и селекции. 2017 янв. 1;21(7):764-769. doi: 10.18699/VJ17.292

Author

Koval, O. A. ; Volkova, O. Y. ; Gorchakov, A. A. и др. / Comparative analysis of lactaptin activity when produced in bacterial or eukaryotic expression systems. в: Вавиловский журнал генетики и селекции. 2017 ; Том 21, № 7. стр. 764-769.

BibTeX

@article{4438867a9eef497cbd5fc2d673bf4a11,
title = "Comparative analysis of lactaptin activity when produced in bacterial or eukaryotic expression systems",
abstract = "Despite the multitude of anticancer cytostatic drugs available to oncologists today, most of such drugs have serious side effects that may preclude their use in some groups of patients. Hence, selective induction of apoptosis in cancer but not normal cells remains an attractive goal of molecular medicine. Lactaptin, a proteolytic fragment of the human milk kappa-casein, has been previously identified as a protein displaying potent killing of cancer cells in vitro. Its recombinant analog (RL2) produced in E. coli has been shown to delay solid tumor growth in vivo. Given that lactaptin is of human origin and is not immunogenic, it can be administered to patients multiple times without running the risk of immune response that could dampen the therapy efficacy. In the present study, we demonstrate that the combination of RL2 and cyclophosphamide treatments has an additive therapeutic effect against hepatoma tumor in immunocompetent mice. We asked whether production of lactaptin in human rather than bacterial cells would result in a protein with increased cytotoxic activity. Using lentiviral vector pCDH as a backbone, two constructs, pEL1 and pEL2, encoding secreted forms of lactaptin that differ in their signal sequences were created. Lactaptin expression in human cell lines was confirmed using Western-blot analysis, whereas ELISA was used for quantification of secreted lactaptin. Next, we measured the cytotoxic effects of the media conditioned by pEL1-transfected HEK293T cells, as assayed against the panel of three human cancer cell lines: MDA-MB-231 (adenocarcinoma), PC3 (prostate cancer), and T98G (glioblastoma). We show that EL1-derived lactaptin is at least 100-fold more cytotoxic than RL2. Taken together, our results provide an opportunity for developing armored immune cells as an {"}off-the-shelf{"} platform for targeted delivery of lactaptin to cancer cells.",
keywords = "Antitumor therapy, Lactaptin, Lentiviral expression constructs, Proapoptotic proteins",
author = "Koval, {O. A.} and Volkova, {O. Y.} and Gorchakov, {A. A.} and Kulemzin, {S. V.} and Tkachenko, {A. V.} and Nushtaeva, {A. A.} and Kuligina, {E. V.} and Richter, {V. A.} and Taranin, {A. V.}",
year = "2017",
month = jan,
day = "1",
doi = "10.18699/VJ17.292",
language = "English",
volume = "21",
pages = "764--769",
journal = "Вавиловский журнал генетики и селекции",
issn = "2500-0462",
publisher = "Institute of Cytology and Genetics of Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences",
number = "7",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Comparative analysis of lactaptin activity when produced in bacterial or eukaryotic expression systems

AU - Koval, O. A.

AU - Volkova, O. Y.

AU - Gorchakov, A. A.

AU - Kulemzin, S. V.

AU - Tkachenko, A. V.

AU - Nushtaeva, A. A.

AU - Kuligina, E. V.

AU - Richter, V. A.

AU - Taranin, A. V.

PY - 2017/1/1

Y1 - 2017/1/1

N2 - Despite the multitude of anticancer cytostatic drugs available to oncologists today, most of such drugs have serious side effects that may preclude their use in some groups of patients. Hence, selective induction of apoptosis in cancer but not normal cells remains an attractive goal of molecular medicine. Lactaptin, a proteolytic fragment of the human milk kappa-casein, has been previously identified as a protein displaying potent killing of cancer cells in vitro. Its recombinant analog (RL2) produced in E. coli has been shown to delay solid tumor growth in vivo. Given that lactaptin is of human origin and is not immunogenic, it can be administered to patients multiple times without running the risk of immune response that could dampen the therapy efficacy. In the present study, we demonstrate that the combination of RL2 and cyclophosphamide treatments has an additive therapeutic effect against hepatoma tumor in immunocompetent mice. We asked whether production of lactaptin in human rather than bacterial cells would result in a protein with increased cytotoxic activity. Using lentiviral vector pCDH as a backbone, two constructs, pEL1 and pEL2, encoding secreted forms of lactaptin that differ in their signal sequences were created. Lactaptin expression in human cell lines was confirmed using Western-blot analysis, whereas ELISA was used for quantification of secreted lactaptin. Next, we measured the cytotoxic effects of the media conditioned by pEL1-transfected HEK293T cells, as assayed against the panel of three human cancer cell lines: MDA-MB-231 (adenocarcinoma), PC3 (prostate cancer), and T98G (glioblastoma). We show that EL1-derived lactaptin is at least 100-fold more cytotoxic than RL2. Taken together, our results provide an opportunity for developing armored immune cells as an "off-the-shelf" platform for targeted delivery of lactaptin to cancer cells.

AB - Despite the multitude of anticancer cytostatic drugs available to oncologists today, most of such drugs have serious side effects that may preclude their use in some groups of patients. Hence, selective induction of apoptosis in cancer but not normal cells remains an attractive goal of molecular medicine. Lactaptin, a proteolytic fragment of the human milk kappa-casein, has been previously identified as a protein displaying potent killing of cancer cells in vitro. Its recombinant analog (RL2) produced in E. coli has been shown to delay solid tumor growth in vivo. Given that lactaptin is of human origin and is not immunogenic, it can be administered to patients multiple times without running the risk of immune response that could dampen the therapy efficacy. In the present study, we demonstrate that the combination of RL2 and cyclophosphamide treatments has an additive therapeutic effect against hepatoma tumor in immunocompetent mice. We asked whether production of lactaptin in human rather than bacterial cells would result in a protein with increased cytotoxic activity. Using lentiviral vector pCDH as a backbone, two constructs, pEL1 and pEL2, encoding secreted forms of lactaptin that differ in their signal sequences were created. Lactaptin expression in human cell lines was confirmed using Western-blot analysis, whereas ELISA was used for quantification of secreted lactaptin. Next, we measured the cytotoxic effects of the media conditioned by pEL1-transfected HEK293T cells, as assayed against the panel of three human cancer cell lines: MDA-MB-231 (adenocarcinoma), PC3 (prostate cancer), and T98G (glioblastoma). We show that EL1-derived lactaptin is at least 100-fold more cytotoxic than RL2. Taken together, our results provide an opportunity for developing armored immune cells as an "off-the-shelf" platform for targeted delivery of lactaptin to cancer cells.

KW - Antitumor therapy

KW - Lactaptin

KW - Lentiviral expression constructs

KW - Proapoptotic proteins

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85075017525&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.18699/VJ17.292

DO - 10.18699/VJ17.292

M3 - Article

AN - SCOPUS:85075017525

VL - 21

SP - 764

EP - 769

JO - Вавиловский журнал генетики и селекции

JF - Вавиловский журнал генетики и селекции

SN - 2500-0462

IS - 7

ER -

ID: 22335874