Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10397/118512
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Title: Strategic decoy peptides interfere with MSI1/AGO2 interaction to elicit tumor suppression effects
Authors: Yang, YP
Lee, ACL
Lin, LT 
Chen, YW
Huang, PI
Ma, HI
Chen, YC
Lo, WL
Lan, YT
Fang, WL
Wang, CY
Liu, YY
Hsu, PK
Lin, WC
Li, CP
Chen, MT
Chien, CS
Wang, ML
Issue Date: Feb-2022
Source: Cancers, Feb. 2022, v. 14, no. 3, 505
Abstract: Peptide drugs that target protein–protein interactions have attracted mounting research efforts towards clinical developments over the past decades. Increasing reports have indicated that expression of Musashi 1 (MSI1) is tightly correlated to high grade of cancers as well as enrichment of cancer stem cells. Treatment failure in malignant tumors glioblastoma multiform (GBM) had also been correlated to CSC-regulating properties of MSI1. It is thus imperative to develop new therapeutics that could effectively improve current regimens used in clinics. MSI1 and AGO2 are two emerging oncogenic molecules that both contribute to GBM tumorigenesis through mRNA regulation of targets involved in apoptosis and cell cycle. In this study, we designed peptide arrays covering the C-terminus of MSI1 and identified two peptides (Pep#11 and Pep#26) that could specifically interfere with the binding with AGO2. Our Biacore analyses ascertained binding between the identified peptides and AGO2. Recombinant reporter system Gaussian luciferase and fluorescent bioconjugate techniques were employed to determine biological functions and pharmacokinetic characteristics of these two peptides. Our data suggested that Pep#11 and Pep#26 could function as decoy peptides by mimicking the interaction function of MSI1 with its binding partner AGO2 in vitro and in vivo. Further experiments using GMB animal models corroborated the ability of Pep#11 and Pep#26 in disrupting MSI1/AGO2 interaction and consequently anti-tumorigenicity and prolonged survival rates. These striking therapeutic efficacies orchestrated by the synthetic peptides were attributed to the decoy function to C-terminal MSI1, especially in malignant brain tumors and glioblastoma.
Keywords: Decoy peptide
MSI1 C-terminus
MSI1/AGO2 disruption
Protein–protein interaction
Tumor suppression
Publisher: MDPI AG
Journal: Cancers 
EISSN: 2072-6694
DOI: 10.3390/cancers14030505
Rights: © 2022 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
The following publication Yang, Y.-P., Lee, A. C.-L., Lin, L.-T., Chen, Y.-W., Huang, P.-I., Ma, H.-I., Chen, Y.-C., Lo, W.-L., Lan, Y.-T., Fang, W.-L., Wang, C.-Y., Liu, Y.-Y., Hsu, P.-K., Lin, W.-C., Li, C.-P., Chen, M.-T., Chien, C.-S., & Wang, M.-L. (2022). Strategic Decoy Peptides Interfere with MSI1/AGO2 Interaction to Elicit Tumor Suppression Effects. Cancers, 14(3), 505 is available at https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers14030505.
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