Singh Vinay K, Zhou Yue, Marsh Joseph A, Uversky Vladimir N, Forman-Kay Julie D, Liu Jingwen, Jia Zongchao
Department of Biochemistry, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, and Molecular Structure and Function, Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Canada.
Cancer Res. 2007 Jan 15;67(2):626-33. doi: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-06-1820.
Synuclein-gamma (SNCG) plays oncogenic roles in breast carcinogenesis. Although the expression of SNCG is abnormally high in advanced and metastatic breast carcinomas, SNCG is not expressed in normal or benign breast tissues. SNCG is an intrinsically disordered protein known to interact with BubR1, a mitotic checkpoint kinase. The SNCG-BubR1 interaction inhibits mitotic checkpoint control upon spindle damage caused by anticancer drugs, such as nocodazole and taxol. Antimicrotubule drugs that cause mitotic arrest and subsequent apoptosis of cancer cells are frequently used to treat breast cancer patients with advanced or metastatic diseases. However, patient response rates to this class of chemotherapeutic agents vary significantly. In this study, we have designed a novel peptide (ANK) and shown its interaction with SNCG using fluorometry, surface plasmon resonance, and isothermal titration calorimetry. Binding of the ANK peptide did not induce folding of SNCG, suggesting that SNCG can function biologically in its intrinsically disordered state. Microinjection of the ANK peptide in breast cancer cell line overexpressing SNCG (MCF7-SNCG) exhibited a similar cell killing response by nocodazole as in the SNCG-negative MCF7 cells. Overexpression of enhanced green fluorescent protein-tagged ANK reduces SNCG-mediated resistance to paclitaxel treatment by approximately 3.5-fold. Our coimmunoprecipitation and colocalization results confirmed the intracellular association of the ANK peptide with SNCG. This is likely due to the disruption of the interaction of SNCG with BubR1 interaction. Our findings shed light on the molecular mechanism of the ANK peptide in releasing SNCG-mediated drug resistance.
突触核蛋白γ(SNCG)在乳腺癌发生过程中发挥致癌作用。尽管SNCG在晚期和转移性乳腺癌中的表达异常高,但在正常或良性乳腺组织中不表达。SNCG是一种内在无序的蛋白质,已知其与有丝分裂检查点激酶BubR1相互作用。SNCG与BubR1的相互作用会抑制抗癌药物(如诺考达唑和紫杉醇)导致纺锤体损伤时的有丝分裂检查点控制。导致癌细胞有丝分裂停滞并随后凋亡的抗微管药物常用于治疗晚期或转移性疾病的乳腺癌患者。然而,患者对这类化疗药物的反应率差异很大。在本研究中,我们设计了一种新型肽(ANK),并使用荧光法、表面等离子体共振和等温滴定量热法展示了其与SNCG的相互作用。ANK肽的结合并未诱导SNCG折叠,这表明SNCG可以在其内在无序状态下发挥生物学功能。在过表达SNCG的乳腺癌细胞系(MCF7-SNCG)中显微注射ANK肽,其对诺考达唑的细胞杀伤反应与SNCG阴性的MCF7细胞相似。增强型绿色荧光蛋白标记的ANK的过表达使SNCG介导的对紫杉醇治疗的耐药性降低了约3.5倍。我们的免疫共沉淀和共定位结果证实了ANK肽与SNCG在细胞内的关联。这可能是由于SNCG与BubR1相互作用的破坏。我们的研究结果揭示了ANK肽释放SNCG介导的耐药性的分子机制。