A placental growth factor-positively charged peptide potentiates the antitumor activity of interferon-gamma in human brain glioblastoma U87 cells

Am J Cancer Res. 2016 Jan 15;6(2):214-25. eCollection 2016.

Abstract

Interferons have been marketed to treat hematological malignancies, but their efficacy in the treatment of solid tumors has been significantly hindered by low antitumor efficacy and numerous side effects. We used a "cDNA in-frame fragment" library screening method to identify short cDNA peptides that potentiate the anti-tumor activity of interferons. In this study, we synthesized a hybrid molecule by fusing a short positively charged peptide derived from placental growth factor-2 to the C-terminus of human IFNγ. Using the human brain glioblastoma U87 cell line as a model system, we found that the hybrid interferon exhibited significantly higher activity than did the wild-type IFNγ in inhibiting tumor cell growth. As compared with the unmodified IFNγ, the hybrid interferon was better at inhibiting cell invasion in a matri-gel assay and at decreasing tumor colony formation. The enhanced antitumor activity of the synthetic interferon was correlated with the activation of interferon pathway genes and the blockade of tumor cell division at the S-G2/M phase. This study demonstrates the potential of a synthetic IFNγ for use as a novel antitumor agent.

Keywords: Antitumor; apoptosis; cell proliferation; interferon-gamma; positively charged peptide; synthetic interferon; tumor.