4.8 Article

Mechanistic validation of a clinical lead stapled peptide that reactivates p53 by dual HDM2 and HDMX targeting

Journal

ONCOGENE
Volume 36, Issue 15, Pages 2184-2190

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/onc.2016.361

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Alexander von Humboldt Foundation Feodor Lynen Fellowship
  2. NIH training grant [T32GM007753]
  3. Doctoral Foreign Studies Award from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research [DFS-134963]
  4. William Lawrence and Blanche Hughes Foundation
  5. Hyundai Hope on Wheels Quantum Award
  6. Alex's Lemonade Stand Reach Grant
  7. Todd J Schwartz Memorial Fund
  8. Leukemia and Lymphoma SCOR and Scholar Awards

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Hydrocarbon-stapled peptides that display key residues of the p53 transactivation domain have emerged as bona fide clinical candidates for reactivating the tumor suppression function of p53 in cancer by dual targeting of the negative regulators HDM2 and HDMX. A recent study questioned the mechanistic specificity of such stapled peptides based on interrogating their capacity to disrupt p53/HDM2 and p53/HDMX complexes in living cells using a new recombinase enhanced bimolecular luciferase complementation platform (ReBiL). Here, we directly evaluate the cellular uptake, intracellular targeting selectivity and p53-dependent cytotoxicity of the clinical prototype ATSP-7041. We find that under standard serum-containing tissue culture conditions, ATSP-7041 achieves intracellular access without membrane disruption, dose-dependently dissociates both p53/HDM2 and p53/HDMX complexes but not an unrelated protein complex in long-term ReBiL experiments, and is selectively cytotoxic to cancer cells bearing wild-type p53 by inducing a surge in p53 protein level. These studies underscore the importance of a thorough stepwise approach, including consideration of the time-dependence of cellular uptake and intracellular distribution, in evaluating and advancing stapled peptides for clinical translation.

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