Chemical Proteomics and Morphological Profiling Revealing MYDGF as a Target for Synthetic Anticancer Macromolecules.
Rachel SimChuan YangYi Yan YangPublished in: Biomacromolecules (2024)
Biodegradable guanidinium-functionalized polycarbonates kill cancer cells via membrane translocation without causing resistance after repeated use, but the exact molecular targets of the polycarbonates are unknown. Here, we investigate the protein targets of the polycarbonates through affinity-based protein profiling and report myeloid-derived growth factor (MYDGF) as the main protein target. Direct binding of the polycarbonates to MYDGF protein is validated through biolayer interferometry. MYDGF is overexpressed in a range of cancer cells, and knockdown of MYDGF is shown to reduce cell proliferation in cancer cells. Through morphological profiling, we also identify similarities in phenotypic effects of the functionalized polycarbonates with topoisomerase I inhibitors, MDM2 inhibitors, and phosphatidylinositol 3kinase inhibitors against cancer cells, suggesting a common mechanism through the PIK3/AKT pathway leading to apoptosis. These findings present the first macromolecular compound targeting MYDGF and may serve as an example for MYDGF modulation as a potential new target for macromolecular chemotherapeutic development.
Keyphrases
- growth factor
- cell proliferation
- protein protein
- binding protein
- amino acid
- single cell
- oxidative stress
- drug delivery
- quantum dots
- bone marrow
- cell death
- small molecule
- immune response
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- acute myeloid leukemia
- risk assessment
- dna binding
- climate change
- high speed
- pi k akt
- cell cycle arrest
- tandem mass spectrometry