Issue 4, 2012

Bioinformatic and experimental fishing for artemisinin-interacting proteins from human nasopharyngeal cancer cells

Abstract

Determining interacting cellular partners of drugs by chemical proteomic techniques is complex and tedious. Most approaches rely on activity-based probe profiling and compound-centric chemical proteomics. The anti-malarial artemisinin also exerts profound anti-cancer activity, but the mechanisms of action are incompletely understood. In the present investigation, we present a novel approach to identify artemisinin-interacting target proteins. Our approach overcomes usual problems in traditional fishing procedures, because the drug was attached to a surface without further chemical modification. The proteins identified effect among others, cell cycle arrest, apoptosis, inhibition of angiogenesis, disruption of cell migration, and modulation of nuclear receptor responsiveness. Furthermore, a bioinformatic approach confirmed experimentally identified proteins and suggested a large number of other interacting proteins. Theoretically predicted interaction partners may serve as a starting point to complete the whole set of proteins binding artemisinin.

Graphical abstract: Bioinformatic and experimental fishing for artemisinin-interacting proteins from human nasopharyngeal cancer cells

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
23 Oct 2011
Accepted
10 Jan 2012
First published
06 Feb 2012

Mol. BioSyst., 2012,8, 1311-1318

Bioinformatic and experimental fishing for artemisinin-interacting proteins from human nasopharyngeal cancer cells

T. Eichhorn, S. Schloissnig, B. Hahn, A. Wendler, R. Mertens, W. D. Lehmann, R. L. Krauth-Siegel and T. Efferth, Mol. BioSyst., 2012, 8, 1311 DOI: 10.1039/C2MB05437J

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