Abstract

Targeted killing of tumor cells while protecting healthy cells is the pressing priority in cancer treatment. Lectins that target a specific glycan marker abundant in cancer cells can be valuable new tools for selective cancer cell killing. The lectin Shiga-like toxin 1 B subunit (Stx1B) is an example that specifically binds globotriaosylceramide (CD77 or Gb3), which is overexpressed in certain cancers. In this study, a human lactoferricin-derived synthetic retro di-peptide R-DIM-P-LF11-215 with antitumor efficacy was fused to the lectin Stx1B to selectively target and kill Gb3+ cancer cells. We produced lectin-peptide fusion proteins in Escherichia coli, isolated them by Gb3-affinity chromatography, and assessed their ability to selectively kill Gb3+ cancer cells in a Calcein AM assay. Furthermore, to expand the applications of R-DIM-P-LF11-215 in developing therapeutic bioconjugates, we labeled R-DIM-P-LF11-215 with the unique reactive non-canonical amino acid Nε -((2-azidoethoxy)carbonyl)-L-lysine (AzK) at a selected position by amber stop codon suppression. The R-DIM-P-LF11-215 20AzK and the unlabeled R-DIM-P-LF11-215 parent peptide were produced as GST-fusion proteins for soluble expression in E. coli for the first time. We purified both variants by size-exclusion chromatography and analyzed their peptide masses. Finally, a cyanin 3 fluorophore was covalently conjugated to R-DIM-P-LF11-215 20AzK by strain-promoted alkyne-azide cycloaddition. Our results showed that the recombinant lectin-peptide fusion R-DIM-P-LF11-215-Stx1B killed >99% Gb3+ HeLa cells while Gb3-negative cells were unaffected. The peptides R-DIM-P-LF11-215 and R-DIM-P-LF11-215 20AzK were produced recombinantly in E. coli in satisfactory amounts and were tested functional by cytotoxicity and cell-binding assays, respectively.

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