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Copyright Nature Publishing Group Feb 2017

Abstract

Nanofibrils of small molecules, as a new class of biofunctional entities, exhibit emergent properties for controlling cell fates, but the relevant mechanism remains to be elucidated and the in vivo effect has yet to be examined. Here, we show that D-peptide nanofibrils, generated by enzyme-instructed self-assembly (EISA), pleiotropically activate extrinsic death signaling for selectively killing cancer cells. Catalyzed by alkaline phosphatases and formed in situ on cancer cells, D-peptide nanofibrils present autocrine proapoptotic ligands to their cognate receptors in a juxtacrine manner, as well as directly cluster the death receptors. As multifaceted initiators, D-peptide nanofibrils induce apoptosis of cancer cells without harming normal cells in a co-culture, kill multidrug-resistant (MDR) cancer cells, boost the activities of anticancer drugs, and inhibit tumor growth in a murine model. Such a supramolecular cellular biochemical process (consisting of reaction, assembly, and binding) for multi-targeting or modulating proteinprotein interaction networks ultimately may lead to new ways for combating cancer drug resistance.

Details

Title
In situ generated D-peptidic nanofibrils as multifaceted apoptotic inducers to target cancer cells
Author
Du, Xuewen; Zhou, Jie; Wang, Huainin; Shi, Junfeng; Kuang, Yi; Zeng, Wu; Yang, Zhimou; Xu, Bing
Pages
n/a
Publication year
2017
Publication date
Feb 2017
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
e-ISSN
20414889
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1869533959
Copyright
Copyright Nature Publishing Group Feb 2017