| Literature DB >> 33356330 |
Guanying Li1, Xunwu Hu1, Pingping Nie2,3, Dingze Mang1, Shi Jiao4, Shijin Zhang1, Sona Rani Roy1, Sachie Yukawa1, Shunsuke Asahina5, Hiroaki Sugasawa6, William Cortes1, Zhaocai Zhou2,3, Ye Zhang1.
Abstract
The Yes-associated protein (YAP) is a major oncoprotein responsible for cell proliferation control. YAP's oncogenic activity is regulated by both the Hippo kinase cascade and uniquely by a mechanical-force-induced actin remodeling process. Inspired by reports that ovarian cancer cells specifically accumulate the phosphatase protein ALPP on lipid rafts that physically link to actin cytoskeleton, we developed a molecular self-assembly (MSA) technology that selectively halts cancer cell proliferation by inactivating YAP. We designed a ruthenium-complex-peptide precursor molecule that, upon cleavage of phosphate groups, undergoes self-assembly to form nanostructures specifically on lipid rafts of ovarian cancer cells. The MSAs exert potent, cancer-cell-specific antiproliferative effects in multiple cancer cell lines and in mouse xenograft tumor models. Our work illustrates how basic biochemical insights can be exploited as the basis for a nanobiointerface fabrication technology which links nanoscale protein activities at specific subcellular locations to molecular biological activities to suppress cancer cell proliferation.Entities:
Keywords: Hippo signaling; actin-remodeling; lipid raft; molecular self-assembly; ovarian cancer
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33356330 DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.0c04435
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189