Chaperone-derived Cu(I)-binding peptide nanofibers disrupt copper homeostasis in cancer cells

14 June 2024, Version 2

Abstract

Copper (Cu) is a transition metal that plays crucial roles in cellular metabolism. Cu+ homeostasis is upregulated in many cancers and contributes to tumorigenesis. However, therapeutic strategies to target Cu+ homeostasis in cancer cells are rarely explored because small molecule Cu+ chelators have poor binding affinity in comparison to the intracellular Cu+ chaperones, enzymes, or ligands. To address this challenge, we introduce a Cu+ chaperone-inspired supramolecular approach to disrupt Cu+ homeostasis in cancer cells that induces programmed cell death. The Nap-FFMTCGGCR peptide self-assembles into nanofibers inside cancer cells with high binding affinity and selectivity for Cu+ due to the presence of the unique MT/CGGC motif, which is conserved in intracellular Cu+ chaperones. Nap-FFMTCGGCR exhibits cytotoxicity towards triple negative breast cancer cells (MDA-MB-231), impairs the activity of Cu+ dependent co-chaperone super oxide dismutase1 (SOD1), and induces oxidative stress. In contrast, Nap-FFMTCGGCR has minimal impact on normal HEK 293T cells. Control peptides show that the self-assembly and Cu+ binding must work in synergy to successfully disrupt Cu+ homeostasis. We show that assembly-enhanced affinity for metal ions opens new therapeutic strategies to address disease-relevant metal ion homeostasis.

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