Abstract

The inhibition of the functions of c-Myc (endogenous and oncogenic) was recently shown to provide a spectacular therapeutic index in cancer mouse models, with complete tumor regression and minimal side-effects in normal tissues. This was achieved by the systemic and conditional expression of omomyc, the cDNA of a designed mutant of the b-HLH-LZ of c-Myc named Omomyc. The overall mode of action of Omomyc consists in the sequestration of Max and the concomitant competition of the Omomyc/Max complex with the endogenous c-Myc/Max heterodimer. This leads to the inhibition of the transactivation of Myc target genes involved in proliferation and metabolism. While this body of work has provided extraordinary insights to guide the future development of new cancer therapies that target c-Myc, Omomyc itself is not a therapeutic agent. In this context, we sought to exploit the use of a b-HLH-LZ to inhibit c-Myc in a cancer cell line in a more direct fashion. We demonstrate that the b-HLH-LZ domain of Max (Max*) behaves as a bona fide protein transduction domain (PTD) that can efficiently transduce across cellular membrane via through endocytosis and translocate to the nucleus. In addition, we show that the treatment of HeLa cells with Max* leads to a reduction of metabolism and proliferation rate. Accordingly, we observe a decrease of the population of HeLa cells in S phase, an accumulation in G1/G0 and the induction of apoptosis. In agreement with these phenotypic changes, we show by q-RT-PCR that the treatment of HeLa cells with Max* leads to the activation of the transcription c-Myc repressed genes as well as the repression of the expression of c-Myc activated genes. In addition to the novel discovery that the Max b-HLH-LZ is a PTD, our findings open up new avenues and strategies for the direct inhibition of c-Myc with b-HLH-LZ analogs.

Highlights

  • Introduction cMyc and Max are members of a large network of basic regionHelix-Loop-Helix-Leucine Zipper (b-HLH-LZ) transcription factors

  • We show that the b-HLH-LZ domain of Max (Max*) possesses the ability to transduce into HeLa cells, translocate to the nucleus and interfere with the transcriptional activities of c-Myc

  • This result indicates that the HA tag is not responsible for the transduction and that it is dispensable for the discrimination of endogenous Max and exogenous Max*

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Summary

Introduction

Myc and Max are members of a large network of basic regionHelix-Loop-Helix-Leucine Zipper (b-HLH-LZ) transcription factors. This network includes L-Myc, N-Myc and the proteins from the Mad family (Mad, Mxi, Mad and Mad). Max is the only protein in the network able to homodimerize It is the HLH-LZ domains that are responsible for the homodimerization of Max and the specific heterodimerization with Myc and Mad proteins, while the basic regions mediate the specific DNA binding [4,5,6,7,8,9]. While Max does not possess a specialized domain capable of recruiting co-repressors, its overexpression has been shown to inhibit c-Myc induced proliferation through the competition for E-box sequence at target gene promoters [10], [11].

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