Abstract

The CD13 antigen's binding site for the Asn-Gly-Arg (NGR) motif enables NGR-containing chemotherapeutic drugs to be delivered to CD13-positive tumours. Human CD13-positive acute myeloid leukemia (AML) cells proliferate abnormally and escape death. Here, we show that the CNGRC-GG-D(KLAKLAK)2 peptide induces death in AML cell lines (U937, THP-1, NB4, HL-60) and primary blood cells from AML patients. Cell death was characterized as a caspase-independent mechanism, without DNA fragmentation, but phosphatidylserine externalization and membrane disruption. Our results demonstrate in U937 cells that (i) the NGR-peptide triggers the loss of mitochondrial potential(ΔΨm) and generates superoxide anion (O2−), (ii) N-acetyl-L-cysteine (NAC) and extra/intracellular Ca2+ chelators (BAPTA) prevent both O2− production and cell death, (iii) the Ca2+-channel blocker nifedipine prevents cell death (indicating that Ca2+ influx is the initial death trigger), and (iv) BAPTA, but not NAC, prevents ΔΨm loss (suggesting O2− is a mitochondrial downstream effector). AML cell lines and primary blasts responding to the lethal action of NGR-peptide express promatrix metalloproteinase-12 (proMMP-12) and its substrate progranulin (an 88 kDa cell survival factor). A cell-free assay highlighted proMMP-12 activation by O2−. Accordingly, NGR-peptide's downregulation of 88 kDa progranulin protein was prevented by BAPTA and NAC. Conversely, AML blast resistance to NGR-peptide is associated with the expression of a distinct, 105 kDa progranulin isoform. These results indicate that CNGRC-GG-D(KLAKLAK)2 induces death in AML cells through the Ca2+-mitochondria-O2.-pathway, and support the link between proMMP-12 activation and progranulin cleavage during cell death. Our findings may have implications for the understanding of tumour biology and treatment.

Highlights

  • The antigen CD13/membrane-anchored amino­ peptidase-N (APN) (EC 3.4.11.2) is expressed on the surface of epithelial cells, fibroblasts and myeloid cells [1, 2]

  • Our results show that CNGRC-GG-D(KLAKLAK)2 (NGR-peptide-1) kills acute myeloid leukemia (AML) primary cells and AML cell lines by targeting leukemic surface CD13

  • We demonstrated that the peptide induces a caspaseindependent programmed cell death by recruiting two importance molecular messengers in cancer cell death: extracellular Ca2 and mitochondrial O2−

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Summary

Introduction

The antigen CD13/membrane-anchored amino­ peptidase-N (APN) (EC 3.4.11.2) is expressed on the surface of epithelial cells, fibroblasts and myeloid cells [1, 2]. It was initially demonstrated that the Asn-Gly-Arg (NGR) motif binds to CD13-positive blood vessels in tumours but not to epithelia in the normal kidney or other CD13rich tissues [3]. The CNGRCG-TNF-α compound fails to bind to CD13 expressed on human myeloid cells (e.g. the THP-1 cell line and blood monocytes), suggesting that the NGRtargeted drug approach might not be valid in myeloid cells [16]. It has not been established whether other NGR-ligands (such as NGR- D(KLAKLAK)2) can affect myeloid cells in general and acute myeloid leukemia cells in particular

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