科学家们驯服了导致 75% 癌症的混乱蛋白质
Scientists tame chaotic protein fueling 75% of cancers

原始链接: https://phys.org/news/2024-01-scientists-chaotic-protein-fueling-cancers.html

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总结一下,根据上面的段落: - 最近的出版物描述了使用合成化学成功抑制 MYC 蛋白,该蛋白存在于 75% 的人类癌症病例中。 - 然而,文章的标题夸大了这一成就,暗示 75% 的数字表明癌症治愈而不仅仅是 MYC 抑制,尽管这种解释可能源于论文中使用的抽象语言。 - 虽然标题准确地反映了文章的正文,但与信誉较差的来源中的标题党文章相比,文章中的其他陈述似乎相对准确。 - 停用 MYC 蛋白本身可能无法完全治愈癌症,需要进行额外的测试和试验。 - 交付方法和潜在的副作用仍然必须得到解决和测试。 - 尽管可能提供重大突破,但研究人员仍处于癌症研究的早期阶段,“75% 的癌症已被驯服”之类的说法还为时过早。 - 进行癌症研究和在实践中成功治疗患者之间存在明显的复杂性。 - 战胜癌症通常需要一长串的突破和步骤。 - 初始攻击向量至关重要且有价值。 - 根据研究结果创建治疗方法是一个漫长而复杂的过程,涉及多个阶段的临床试验。 - 许多人因癌症治疗而幸存下来,并且治疗效果一直在改善。 - Misunderstandings and oversimplifications are common among individuals unfamiliar with medical research processes. 总的来说,这篇文章意味着,虽然 MYC 抑制提供了显着的科学成就,但在声称任何明确的癌症治愈成功之前,仍然需要进一步的研究和治疗方法,包括解决递送技术和探索潜在的副作用。
相关文章

原文

MYC is the shapeless protein responsible for making the majority of human cancer cases worse. UC Riverside researchers have found a way to rein it in, offering hope for a new era of treatments.

In , MYC helps guide the process of transcription, in which is converted from DNA into RNA and, eventually, into proteins. "Normally, MYC's activity is strictly controlled. In , it becomes hyper active, and is not regulated properly," said UCR associate professor of chemistry Min Xue.

"MYC is less like food for cells and more like a steroid that promotes cancer's rapid growth," Xue said. "That is why MYC is a culprit in 75% of all human cancer cases."

At the outset of this project the UCR research team believed that if they could dampen MYC's hyperactivity, they could open a window in which the cancer could be controlled.

However, finding a way to control MYC was challenging because unlike most other proteins, MYC has no structure. "It's basically a glob of randomness," Xue said. "Conventional pipelines rely on well-defined structures, and this does not exist for MYC."

A new paper in the Journal of the American Chemical Society, on which Xue is the senior author, describes a peptide compound that binds to MYC and suppresses its activity.

In 2018, the researchers noticed that changing the rigidity and shape of a peptide improves its ability to interact with structureless protein targets such as MYC.

"Peptides can assume a variety of forms, shapes, and positions," Xue said. "Once you bend and connect them to form rings, they cannot adopt other possible forms, so they then have a low level of randomness. This helps with the binding."

In the paper, the team describes a new peptide that binds directly to MYC with what is called sub-micro-molar affinity, which is getting closer to the strength of an antibody. In other words, it is a very strong and specific interaction.

"We improved the binding performance of this peptide over previous versions by two orders of magnitude," Xue said. "This makes it closer to our drug development goals."

Currently, the researchers are using lipid nanoparticles to deliver the peptide into cells. These are small spheres made of fatty molecules, and they are not ideal for use as a drug. Going forward, the researchers are developing chemistry that improves the lead peptide's ability to get inside cells.

Once the peptide is in the cell, it will bind to MYC, changing MYC's physical properties and preventing it from performing transcription activities.

Xue's laboratory at UC Riverside develops molecular tools to better understand biology and uses that knowledge to perform drug discovery. He has long been interested in the chemistry of chaotic processes, which attracted him to the challenge of taming MYC.

"MYC represents chaos, basically, because it lacks structure. That, and its direct impact on so many types of cancer make it one of the holy grails of cancer development," Xue said. "We are very excited that it is now within our grasp."

More information: Zhonghan Li et al, MYC-Targeting Inhibitors Generated from a Stereodiversified Bicyclic Peptide Library, Journal of the American Chemical Society (2024). DOI: 10.1021/jacs.3c09615

Citation: Scientists tame chaotic protein fueling 75% of cancers (2024, January 11) retrieved 24 January 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2024-01-scientists-chaotic-protein-fueling-cancers.html

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