Pokeweed antiviral protein (PAP) is a plant-derived, highly potent ribosome inactivating protein that causes inhibition of protein translation and rapid cell death. We and others have delivered this protein to various cell types, including cancer cells, using hormones to specifically target cells bearing the hormone receptor. Here, we compare binding and cytotoxicity of GnRH-PAP hormonotoxins prepared either by protein conjugation (GnRH-PAP conjugate) or through recombinant DNA technology (GnRH-PAP fusion).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPokeweed antiviral protein (PAP) is a plant-derived, highly potent ribosome inactivating protein that causes inhibition of protein translation and rapid cell death. We have previously described potent cytotoxic activity of a GnRH (gonadotropin-releasing hormone) receptor-targeted conjugate protein (GnRH-PAP) and demonstrated that cytotoxicity depended on the number of GnRH receptors and the duration of exposure. Here, we demonstrate that the GnRH-PAP conjugate was cytotoxic to three different prostate cancer cell lines, supporting the feasibility of using such hormonotoxins as novel therapeutics for hormone-responsive cancers such as prostate cancer.
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