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Molecular Glue Sticks It to Cancer

15 July 2011 | no comments | Tech News

[TECH NEWS]

Imagine dropping dish soap into a sink full of greasy water. What happens? As soon as the soap hits the water, the grease recoils—and retreats to the edges of the sink. Now, what if the sink was a cancer cell, the globs of grease were cancer-promoting proteins and the dish soap was a potential drug? According to new research from the University of Toronto Mississauga, such a drug could force the proteins to the cell’s membrane (a.k.a., the edge of the sink)—and make the cancer cell more vulnerable to chemotherapy. “This is a totally new approach to cancer therapy,” says Professor Patrick Gunning of the Department of Chemical and Physical Sciences. “Everything prior to this has targeted functionally relevant binding sites. Our approach inhibits the mobility of cancer-promoting proteins within cells—essentially, it’s like molecularly targeted glue.” The “glue” is shaped like a dumbbell: at one end is an anchor that sticks to the membrane, and at the other is a molecule that binds to the cancer-promoting proteins. The anchor is a cholesterol molecule that is well known to chemists for sticking to cell membranes. The protein recognition molecule is fairly picky about what it will bind to, reducing the risk of drug-related side effects.

6/22/2011, University of Toronto/Eurekalert

 


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