(Press-News.org) Genetic mutations aren't the only thing that can keep a protein called PTEN from doing its tumor-suppressing job. Johns Hopkins researchers have now discovered that four small chemical tags attached (reversibly) to the protein's tail can have the same effect, and they say their finding may offer a novel path for drug design to keep PTEN working.
In a report published on July 9 in the journal eLife, the Johns Hopkins scientists describe how a cluster of four phosphate groups, first found 13 years ago to bind to PTEN's tail, controls its activity.
"Now that we know how these phosphate tags are involved in regulating PTEN's activity, new options may be available for drugs that interfere with them," says Philip A. Cole, M.D., Ph.D., the E.K. Marshall and Thomas H. Maren Professor and director of the Department of Pharmacology and Molecular Sciences at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.
In addition to phosphate tags, mutations in genes that code for a protein can cause some protein activities to be permanently on or off. Mutations that deactivate PTEN often lead to cancer because PTEN's job is to prevent cells from dividing too much, Cole notes. But there are times when a cell needs to divide to replace dead cells, so scientists knew there had to be a naturally occurring mechanism for turning PTEN off, and they hypothesized that the phosphates on its tail were responsible, as they are in other proteins.
To get at the heart of the question, the Johns Hopkins team had to overcome technical obstacles, including a way to engineer a special version of PTEN in which the phosphates were permanently bound to the tail.
"We had to synthesize the tail of PTEN in the lab and then fit that together with the rest of PTEN, which was made by insect cells," says David Bolduc, a graduate student in Cole's laboratory and the lead author of the paper. "Once we cleared that hurdle, we were able to learn a lot more about how phosphates regulate PTEN."
Armed with their engineered protein, the team analyzed its shape, where in cells it was located and its activity — tasks aided by miniature X-ray imagers and biochemical tests that shed light on how PTEN interacted with other entities, like PIP3, a fat-like molecule located just inside the outer envelope of cells.
The team found that when there are no phosphates on PTEN's tail, it is in its active form and it removes a phosphate tag from PIP3. The loss of the phosphate alters PIP3's activity and causes a chain reaction of effects on other important regulatory proteins that ultimately suppresses cell division and migration, both deadly aspects of tumor progression.
Cole explains that when a cell needs to divide, another protein, most often CK2, adds phosphates to PTEN's tail, causing a change in its shape and location. Its tail curls back on the rest of the protein and prevents it from interacting with PIP3 in the outer envelope of the cell, so PTEN ends up inactive, in the fluid-filled middle of the cell. When the phosphates are removed, PTEN relocates to the outer envelope, where it removes a phosphate tag from PIP3 to initiate the chain reaction that suppresses tumor formation.
"The tail of PTEN actually has a competition going on between binding to itself and binding to the outer envelope of the cell where PIP3 is located," explains Bolduc. "Any drug that can prevent the tail from binding itself might also maintain the tumor-fighting activity of PTEN."
According to Cole, many cancer patients have an overabundance of CK2, the protein that adds phosphates to PTEN and turns it off. So, increasing the activity of PTEN might be helpful not only to patients with defective PTEN, but also to those with cancer-causing mutations in other proteins.
INFORMATION:
Other authors of the report include Meghdad Rahdar, Becky Tu-Sekine, Sindhu Carmen Sivakumaren, Daniel Raben, L. Mario Amzel, Peter Devreotes and Sandra Gabelli of the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.
This work was supported by grants from National Cancer Institute (CA74305, R37CA043460) and the National Institute of General Medical Sciences (GM34933, GM28007).
On the Web:
Link to article: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/elife.00691
Cole Lab: http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/pharmacology_molecular_sciences/faculty/bios/cole.html
Media Contacts: Catherine Kolf; 443-287-2251; ckolf@jhmi.edu
Vanessa McMains; 410-502-9410; vmcmain1@jhmi.edu
Shawna Williams; 410-955-8236; shawna@jhmi.edu
Tumor-suppressor Protein Gives Up Its Secrets
Discovery promises new targets for cancer drug design
2013-07-09
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
What warring couples want: Power, not apologies, Baylor study shows
2013-07-09
The most common thing that couples want from each other during a conflict is not an apology, but a willingness to relinquish power, according to a new Baylor University study.
Giving up power comes in many forms, among them giving a partner more independence, admitting faults, showing respect and being willing to compromise. The study is published in the Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology.
"It's common for partners to be sensitive to how to share power and control when making decisions in their relationship," said researcher Keith Sanford, Ph.D., an associate professor ...
Scientists image vast subglacial water system under West Antarctica's Thwaites Glacier
2013-07-09
AUSTIN, Texas — In a development that will help predict potential sea level rise from the Antarctic ice sheet, scientists from The University of Texas at Austin's Institute for Geophysics have used an innovation in radar analysis to accurately image the vast subglacial water system under West Antarctica's Thwaites Glacier. They have detected a swamp-like canal system beneath the ice that is several times as large as Florida's Everglades.
The findings, as described this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, use new observational techniques to address ...
Bird vaccine for West Nile Virus
2013-07-09
University of British Columbia researchers have developed a vaccine that may halt the spread of West Nile Virus (WNV) among common and endangered bird species.
WNV, a mosquito borne pathogen, arrived in North America in 1999 and is now endemic across the continent. In 2012 alone, WNV killed 286 people in the United States, and 42 people have died from the virus in Canada since 2002. There is currently no effective vaccine against WNV infection in humans or birds.
Common birds such as crows, ravens and jays, and endangered species such as the Greater Sage-Grouse and ...
Double-barreled attack on obesity in no way a no-brainer
2013-07-09
In the constant cross talk between our brain and our gut, two gut hormones are already known to tell the brain when we have had enough to eat. New research suggests that boosting levels of these hormones simultaneously may be an effective new weapon in the fight against obesity.
Dr Shu Lin, Dr Yan-Chuan Shi and Professor Herbert Herzog, from Sydney's Garvan Institute of Medical Research, have shown that when mice are injected with PYY3-36 and PP, they eat less, gain less fat, and tend not to develop insulin-resistance, a precursor to diabetes. At the same time, the researchers ...
Graphene on its way to conquer Silicon Valley
2013-07-09
The unique properties of graphene such as its incredible strength and, at the same time, its little weight have raised high expectations in modern material science. Graphene, a two-dimensional crystal of carbon atoms packed in a honeycomb structure, has been in the focus of intensive research which led to a Nobel Prize of Physics in 2010. One major challenge is to successfully integrate graphene into the established metal-silicide technology. Scientists from the University of Vienna and their co-workers from research institutes in Germany and Russia have succeeded in fabricating ...
Technologies for monitoring remaining leukemia after treatment may help predict patient outcomes
2013-07-09
(WASHINGTON, July 9, 2013) – New evidence suggests that using advanced genetics technologies to monitor for remaining cancer cells after treatment may soon become an effective tool to inform treatment decisions and ultimately predict patient outcomes for patients with a particularly aggressive form of acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL). Study results were published online today in Blood, the Journal of the American Society of Hematology (ASH).
Approximately 25 to 30 percent of all adults with ALL, the second most common type of acute leukemia, have what is known as Philadelphia ...
Are clinical trial data shared sufficiently today?
2013-07-09
Ben Goldacre, research fellow at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, says we need all the evidence to make informed decisions about medicines.
The lack of progress on transparency has been startling, he writes. Current estimates suggest that around half of all trials for the treatments being used today have gone unpublished; and that trials with positive results are twice as likely to be published.
There is legislation mandating greater transparency – such as the law requiring trial results to be posted on the website clinicaltrials.gov – but the published ...
Suspicions confirmed: Brain tumors in children have a common cause
2013-07-09
Brain cancer is the primary cause of cancer mortality in children. Even in cases when the cancer is cured, young patients suffer from the stress of a treatment that can be harmful to the developing brain. In a search for new target structures that would create more gentle treatments, cancer researchers are systematically analyzing all alterations in the genetic material of these tumors. This is the mission of the PedBrain consortium, which was launched in 2010. Led by Professor Stefan Pfister from the German Cancer Research Center (Deutsches Krebsforschungszentrum, DKFZ), ...
GR20/Amaldi10: Space-time is not the same for everyone
2013-07-09
Before the Big Bang, space-time as we know it did not exist. So how was it born? The process of creating normal space-time from an earlier state dominated by quantum gravity has been studied for years by theorists at the Faculty of Physics, University of Warsaw. Recent analyses suggest a surprising conclusion: not all elementary particles are subject to the same space-time.
Several billion years ago, in the era soon after the Big Bang, the Universe was so dense and so hot that elementary particles felt the existence of gravity strongly. For decades, physicists around ...
RUB researchers decode the interplay between enkephalins and pain receptors
2013-07-09
"Pain begone!" In order to send out this signal, the human body produces tiny messenger molecules that dock to certain receptors. Using traditional biochemical methods, this interaction between the messengers, so-called enkephalins, and opioid receptors is very difficult to study. An interdisciplinary team of biochemists and inorganic chemists at the Ruhr-Universität Bochum (RUB) has now succeeded in identifying the structure of an enkephalin in solution and to track its interaction with the opioid receptor in detail. The analysis provides a new, precise starting point ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Lurie Children’s campaign urges parents to follow up right away if newborn screening results are abnormal
Does drinking alcohol really take away the blues? It's not what you think
Speed of risk perception is connected to how information is arranged
High-risk pregnancy specialists analyze AI system to detect heart defects on fetal ultrasound exams
‘Altar tent’ discovery puts Islamic art at the heart of medieval Christianity
Policy briefs present approach for understanding prison violence
Early adult mortality is higher than expected in US post-COVID
Recycling lithium-ion batteries cuts emissions and strengthens supply chain
Study offers new hope for relieving chronic pain in dialysis patients
How does the atmosphere affect ocean weather?
Robots get smarter to work in sewers
Speech Accessibility Project data leads to recognition improvements on Microsoft Azure
Tigers in the neighborhood: How India makes room for both tigers and people
Grove School’s Arthur Paul Pedersen publishes critical essay on scientific measurement literacy
Moffitt study finds key biomarker to predict KRASG12C inhibitor effectiveness in lung cancer
Improving blood transfusion monitoring in critical care patients: Insights from diffuse optics
Powerful legal and financial services enable kleptocracy, research shows
Carbon capture from constructed wetlands declines as they age
UCLA-led study establishes link between early side effects from prostate cancer radiation and long-term side effects
Life cycles of some insects adapt well to a changing climate. Others, not so much.
With generative AI, MIT chemists quickly calculate 3D genomic structures
The gut-brain connection in Alzheimer’s unveiled with X-rays
NIH-funded clinical trial will evaluate new dengue therapeutic
Sound is a primary issue in the lives of skateboarders, study shows
Watch what you eat: NFL game advertisements promote foods high in fat, sodium
Red Dress Collection Concert hosted by Sharon Stone kicks off American Heart Month
One of the largest studies on preterm birth finds a maternal biomarker test significantly reduces neonatal morbidities and improves neonatal outcomes
One of the largest studies of its kind finds early intervention with iron delivered intravenously during pregnancy is a safe and effective treatment for anemia
New Case Western Reserve University study identifies key protein’s role in psoriasis
First-ever ethics checklist for portable MRI brain researchers
[Press-News.org] Tumor-suppressor Protein Gives Up Its SecretsDiscovery promises new targets for cancer drug design