» Articles » PMID: 12941602

Recombinant Apoptin Multimers Kill Tumor Cells but Are Nontoxic and Epitope-shielded in a Normal-cell-specific Fashion

Overview
Journal Exp Cell Res
Specialty Cell Biology
Date 2003 Aug 28
PMID 12941602
Citations 18
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Apoptin, a protein derived from chicken anemia virus, induces apoptosis in human transformed or tumor cells but not in normal cells. When produced in bacteria as a recombinant fusion with maltose-binding protein (MBP-Apoptin), Apoptin forms a distinct, stable multimeric complex that is remarkably homogeneous and uniform. Here, using cytoplasmic microinjection, we showed that recombinant MBP-Apoptin multimers retained the characteristics of the ectopically expressed wild-type Apoptin; namely, the complexes translocated to the nucleus of tumor cells and induced apoptosis, whereas they remained in the cytoplasm of normal, primary cells and exerted no apparent toxic effect. In normal cells, MBP-Apoptin formed increasingly large, organelle-sized globular bodies with time postinjection and eventually lost the ability to be detected by immunofluorescence analysis. Costaining with an acidotrophic marker indicated that these globular structures did not correspond to lysosomes. Immunoprecipitation studies showed that MBP-Apoptin remained fully antibody-accessible regardless of buffer stringency when microinjected into tumor cells. In contrast, MBP-Apoptin in normal cells was only recoverable under stringent lysis conditions, whereas under milder conditions they became fully shielded with time on two epitopes spanning the entire protein. Further biochemical analysis showed that the long-term fate of Apoptin protein aggregates in normal cells was their eventual elimination. Our results provide the first example of a tumor-specific apoptosis-inducing aggregate that is essentially sequestered by factors or conditions present in the cytoplasm of healthy, nontransformed cells. This characteristic should reveal more about the cellular interactions of this viral protein as well as further enhance its safety as a potential tumor-specific therapeutic agent.

Citing Articles

Detection and Molecular Characterization of Gyrovirus Galga 1 in Chickens in Northern Vietnam Reveals Evidence of Recombination.

Tran G, Huynh L, Dong H, Rattanasrisomporn A, Kayan A, Bui D Animals (Basel). 2025; 15(1.

PMID: 39795010 PMC: 11718778. DOI: 10.3390/ani15010067.


Semisynthesis reveals apoptin as a tumour-selective protein prodrug that causes cytoskeletal collapse.

Wyatt J, Chan Y, Hess M, Tavassoli M, Muller M Chem Sci. 2023; 14(14):3881-3892.

PMID: 37035694 PMC: 10074440. DOI: 10.1039/d2sc04481a.


Apoptin as a Tumor-Specific Therapeutic Agent: Current Perspective on Mechanism of Action and Delivery Systems.

Malla W, Arora R, Khan R, Mahajan S, Tiwari A Front Cell Dev Biol. 2020; 8:524.

PMID: 32671070 PMC: 7330108. DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2020.00524.


Novel characteristics of the avian gyrovirus 2 genome.

Yao S, Gao X, Tuo T, Han C, Gao Y, Qi X Sci Rep. 2017; 7:41068.

PMID: 28198372 PMC: 5309784. DOI: 10.1038/srep41068.


A truncated apoptin protein variant selectively kills cancer cells.

Ruiz-Martinez S, Castro J, Vilanova M, Bruix M, Laurents D, Ribo M Invest New Drugs. 2017; 35(3):260-268.

PMID: 28120180 DOI: 10.1007/s10637-017-0431-6.