Apoptin: Therapeutic Potential of an Early Sensor of Carcinogenic Transformation

Author:

Backendorf Claude1,Visser Astrid E.1,de Boer A.G.2,Zimmerman Rhyenne3,Visser Mijke3,Voskamp Patrick3,Zhang Ying-Hui1,Noteborn Mathieu3

Affiliation:

1. Molecular Genetics, Leiden Institute of Chemistry;

2. Blood-Brain Barrier Research Group, Division of Pharmacology, Leiden-Amsterdam Center for Drug Research;

3. Biological Chemistry, Leiden Institute of Chemistry, Leiden University, 2300 RA Leiden, The Netherlands;, , , , , , ,

Abstract

The avian virus-derived protein apoptin induces p53-independent apoptosis in a tumor-specific way. Apoptin acts as a multimeric complex and forms superstructures upon binding to DNA. In tumor cells, apoptin is phosphorylated and mainly nuclear, whereas in normal cells it is unphosphorylated, cytoplasmic, and becomes readily neutralized. Interestingly, apoptin phosphorylation, nuclear translocation, and apoptosis can transiently be induced in normal cells by cotransfecting SV40 large T oncogene, indicating that apoptin recognizes early stages of oncogenic transformation. In cancer cells, apoptin appears to recognize survival signals, which it is able to redirect into cell death impulses. Apoptin targets include DEDAF, Nur77, Nmi, Hippi, and the potential drug target APC1. Apoptin-transgenic mice and animal tumor models have revealed apoptin as a safe and efficient antitumor agent, resulting in significant tumor regression. Future antitumor therapies could use apoptin either as a therapeutic bullet or as an early sensor of druggable tumor-specific processes.

Publisher

Annual Reviews

Subject

Pharmacology,Toxicology

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