The Atomic Basis For Paclitaxel Sensitization Following Loss Of Crmp2 Phosphorylation In Ovarian Cancer Cells

CANCER RESEARCH(2016)

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摘要
The chemotherapeutic agent paclitaxel increases cancer cell microtubule stability, induces mitotic arrest and cancer cell death and improves survival of cancer patients. However, in ovarian and other cancers, it only elicits a response in less than half of patients who receive it. We have previously shown that enhancing microtubule stability in cells prior to paclitaxel treatment, further increases paclitaxel-induced microtubule stability and cancer cell death (Ahmed et al., Cancer Cell, 2007;12:514 and Ahmed et al., Cancer Research 2011;71:5806). We now report that the microtubule-associated protein CRMP2, and FER kinase are expressed in almost half of high-grade serous ovarian cancers and that inhibiting the phosphorylation of CRMP2 by FER is sufficient for enhancing paclitaxel-induced microtubule stability and cytotoxicity in multiple ovarian cancer cell lines. We are also able propose a detailed mechanism underlying these observations. A combination of biochemistry, super-resolution fluorescence microscopy, total internal reflection fluorescence (TIRF) microscopy and electron microscopy reveals that CRMP2 induces microtubule nucleation, elongation, bundling and stability. Moreover, FER phosphorylates CRMP2 at 6 tyrosine residues, two of which (Tyr479 and Tyr499) are critical for modulating CRMP2 function; this agrees with site-directed mutagenesis in cancer cells which points to Tyr479 as a critical site for association between CRMP2 and microtubules. A comparison of the crystal structures of wild-type CRMP2 and Tyr479Glu/Tyr499Glu phosphomimetic mutants indicate that phosphorylation of these sites induces significant conformational changes that prevent CRMP2 from forming tetramers that are known to be critical for its microtubule bundling activity. This then leads us to propose a molecular model of how CRMP2 associates with microtubules, explaining how targeting CRMP2 phosphorylation can be exploited for enhancing the therapeutic efficacy of paclitaxel. Citation Format: Yiyan Zheng, Ritika Sethi, Frank von Delft, Ahmed Ashour Ahmed. The atomic basis for paclitaxel sensitization following loss of CRMP2 phosphorylation in ovarian cancer cells. [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 107th Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research; 2016 Apr 16-20; New Orleans, LA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2016;76(14 Suppl):Abstract nr 3856.
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