TY - JOUR
T1 - Peptide-Based Biosensing of Redox-Active Protein-Heme Complexes Indicates Novel Mechanism for Tumor Survival under Oxidative Stress
AU - Zhang, Kai
AU - Fan, Zhenqiang
AU - Weng, Jiena
AU - Zhao, Jianfeng
AU - Wang, Jiaying
AU - Wu, Hao
AU - Xie, Minhao
AU - Zhou, Hong
AU - Li, Hao
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2019/10/25
Y1 - 2019/10/25
N2 - Signal response of several relevant protein-cofactor interactions, united in one bioassay, may greatly enhance the ability to study the intriguing molecular mechanisms of pathological process such as the tumor immunological process of chronic inflammation and oxidative stress. Here, a peptide-based multiplexed bioassay has been developed and applied in studying the interactions among ferritin, p53, and heme under oxidative stress. In a malignant breast cancer cell line, it can be observed that oxidative stress-triggered nuclear co-translocations of heme and ferritin may lead to direct molecular contact of ferritin with p53, to pass heme to p53, which subsequently sequestered into the cytoplasm, therefore forming a possible new route of tumor survival under oxidative stress, by using the stress to circumvent oxidative stress-induced apoptosis. The observed peroxidase-like activity of ferritin-heme and p53-heme complexes may also contribute to survival. Such activity is observed most prominently in triple negative or the most malignant breast cancer subtype. These results may suggest the possible future use of this bioassay in furthering the understanding of tumor molecular pathology, as well as the early detection, diagnosis, and prognosis of cancer.
AB - Signal response of several relevant protein-cofactor interactions, united in one bioassay, may greatly enhance the ability to study the intriguing molecular mechanisms of pathological process such as the tumor immunological process of chronic inflammation and oxidative stress. Here, a peptide-based multiplexed bioassay has been developed and applied in studying the interactions among ferritin, p53, and heme under oxidative stress. In a malignant breast cancer cell line, it can be observed that oxidative stress-triggered nuclear co-translocations of heme and ferritin may lead to direct molecular contact of ferritin with p53, to pass heme to p53, which subsequently sequestered into the cytoplasm, therefore forming a possible new route of tumor survival under oxidative stress, by using the stress to circumvent oxidative stress-induced apoptosis. The observed peroxidase-like activity of ferritin-heme and p53-heme complexes may also contribute to survival. Such activity is observed most prominently in triple negative or the most malignant breast cancer subtype. These results may suggest the possible future use of this bioassay in furthering the understanding of tumor molecular pathology, as well as the early detection, diagnosis, and prognosis of cancer.
KW - P53
KW - electrochemical biosensor
KW - oxidative stress
KW - peptide-based biosensing
KW - protein interaction
KW - protein-cofactor interactions
KW - tumor survival
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85073169019&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1021/acssensors.9b01083
DO - 10.1021/acssensors.9b01083
M3 - 文章
C2 - 31525915
AN - SCOPUS:85073169019
SN - 2379-3694
VL - 4
SP - 2671
EP - 2678
JO - ACS Sensors
JF - ACS Sensors
IS - 10
ER -