4 research outputs found

    Experimental and Computational Studies Reveal Novel Interaction of Lymphocytes Antigen 6K to TGF-β Receptor Complex

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    TGF-β signaling promotes migration, invasion, and distant colonization of cancer cells in advanced metastatic cancers. TGF-β signaling suppresses the anti-tumor immune response in a tumor microenvironment, allowing sustained tumor growth. TGF-β plays an important role in normal physiology; thus it is no surprise that the clinical development of effective and safe TGF-β inhibitors has been hampered due to their high toxicity. We discovered that increased expression of LY6K in cancer cells led to increased TGF-β signaling and that inhibition of LY6K could lead to reduced TGF-β signaling and reduced in vivo tumor growth. LY6K is a highly cancer-specific protein, and it is not expressed in normal organs except in the testes. Thus, LY6K is a valid target for developing therapeutic strategies to inhibit TGF-β signaling in cancer cells. We employed in vitro pull-down assays and molecular dynamics simulations to understand the structural determinants of the TGF-β receptor complex with LY6K. This combined approach allowed us to identify the critical residues and dynamics of the LY6K interaction with the TGF-β receptor complex. These data are critical in designing novel drugs for the inhibition of TGF-β in LY6K expressing cancer, induction of anti-tumor immune response, and inhibition of tumor growth and metastatic spread

    Structural and functional characterization of β-cyanoalanine synthase from Tetranychus urticae

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    Tetranychus urticae is a polyphagous spider mite that can feed on more than 1100 plant species including cyanogenic plants. The herbivore genome contains a horizontally acquired gene tetur10g01570 (TuCAS) that was previously shown to participate in cyanide detoxification. To understand the structure and determine the function of TuCAS in T. urticae, crystal structures of the protein with lysine conjugated pyridoxal phosphate (PLP) were determined. These structures reveal extensive TuCAS homology with the beta-substituted alanine synthase family, and they show that this enzyme utilizes a similar chemical mechanism involving a stable alpha-aminoacrylate intermediate in beta-cyanoalanine and cysteine synthesis. We demonstrate that TuCAS is more efficient in the synthesis of beta-cyanoalanine, which is a product of the detoxification reaction between cysteine and cyanide, than in the biosynthesis of cysteine. Also, the enzyme carries additional enzymatic activities that were not previously described. We show that TuCAS can detoxify cyanide using O-acetyl-L-serine as a substrate, leading to the direct formation of beta-cyanoalanine. Moreover, it catalyzes the reaction between the TuCAS-bound alpha-aminoacrylate intermediate and aromatic compounds with a thiol group. In addition, we have tested several compounds as TuCAS inhibitors. Overall, this study identifies additional functions for TuCAS and provides new molecular insight into the xenobiotic metabolism of T. urticae
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