Abstract

The restoration of the function of p53 in tumors is a therapeutic strategy for the highly frequent mutation of the TP53 tumor suppressor gene. P460 is a wild-type peptide derived from the p53 C-terminus and has been proven to be capable of restoring the tumor suppressor function of p53. The poor accumulation of drugs in tumors is a serious hindrance to tumor treatment. For enhancing the activity of P460, the tumor-targeting sequence Arg-Gly-Asp-Arg (RGDR, C-end rule peptide) was introduced into the C-terminus of P460 to generate the new peptide P462. P462 presented better activity than P460 in inhibiting the proliferation of cancer cells and increasing the number of tumor cells undergoing apoptosis. Cell adhesion analysis and tumor imaging results revealed that P462 showed more specific and extensive binding with tumor cells and greater accumulation in tumors than the wild-type peptide. Importantly, treatment with P462 was more efficacious than that with P460 in vivo and was associated with considerably improved tumor-homing activity. This study highlights the importance of the roles of the tumor-homing sequence RGDR in the enhancement in cell attachment and tumor accumulation. The results of this work indicate that P462 could be a novel drug candidate for tumor treatment.

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