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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
Antibody-mediated transduction of p53 selectively kills cancer cells.
Some human cancers are caused by functional defects in p53 that are restored by gene therapy with wild-type p53. To circumvent the use of viral vectors, we reconstituted cancer cell lines with p53 by protein transduction. A fusion protein was produced from cDNA constructed from the Fv fragment of an antibody that penetrates living cells and wild-type p53 (Fv-p53). Fv-p53 penetrated and killed cancer cells that do not express p53. Additionally, Fv-p53 killed cancer cells that were malignant as a result of mutations within p53, nuclear exclusion of p53 and over-expression of MDM2. Non-specific toxicity was excluded by showing that Fv-p53 penetrated but did not kill primary cells and cancer cells unresponsive to p53. Fv fragments alone were not cytotoxic, indicating that killing was due to transduction of p53. Fv-p53 was shown to penetrate cancer cells engrafted in vivo. These results support continued efforts to evaluate the potential efficacy of Fv-p53 for the treatment of certain cancers in vivo.[1]