Abstract

The free chromophores isolated from the antitumor protein antibiotics, auromomycin (AUR) and macromomycin (MCR), were rapidly inactivated by incubation in serum-containing medium at 37 degrees C in the dark with respect to cytocidal activity to human lung carcinoma A549 cells. Under the same conditions, the intact antibiotics, their pronase-hydrolysates and reconstituents from the chromophores and apo-proteins were stable. Intact and reconstituted AUR and MCR were more resistant to pronase digestion than the apo-proteins. The analyses of the pronase-hydrolysates of AUR and MCR by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and ultrafiltration showed that the antibiotics (13 kilodaltons (kDa] were degraded to produce peptide fragments (1-3 kDa) in which most cytotoxicity of the pronase-hydrolysates resided. The pronase-hydrolysates exhibited a differential cytocidal activity to normal diploid fibroblasts (WI38), their SV40-transformants (VA13) and carcinoma cells (A549) of human lung origin as was observed for the intact antibiotics. These results indicate that specific interaction between the chromophores and the pronase-resistant peptide segments (1-3 kDa) of the protein moiety stabilizes the cytocidal activity of the chromophores and also protects the peptide segments from pronase digestion.

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