INVESTIGADORES
GOTTARDO MarÍa Florencia
artículos
Título:
CIGB-300 anticancer peptide regulates the protein kinase CK2-dependent phosphoproteome
Autor/es:
PERERA, YASSER; RAMOS, YASSEL; PADRÓN, GABRIEL; CABALLERO, EVELIN; GUIROLA, OSMANY; CALIGIURI, LORENA G.; LORENZO, NORAILYS; GOTTARDO, FLORENCIA; FARINA, HERNÁN G.; FILHOL, ODILE; COCHET, CLAUDE; PEREA, SILVIO E.
Revista:
MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR BIOCHEMISTRY
Editorial:
SPRINGER
Referencias:
Lugar: Berlin; Año: 2020 vol. 470 p. 63 - 75
ISSN:
0300-8177
Resumen:
Casein-kinase CK2 is a Ser/Thr protein kinase that fosters cell survival and proliferation of malignant cells. The CK2 holoenzyme, formed by the association of two catalytic alpha/alpha´ (CK2α/CK2α´) and two regulatory beta subunits (CK2β), phosphorylates diverse intracellular proteins partaking in key cellular processes. A handful of such CK2 substrates have been identified as targets for the substrate-binding anticancer peptide CIGB-300. However, since CK2β also contains a CK2 phosphorylation consensus motif, this peptide may also directly impinge on CK2 enzymatic activity, thus globally modifying the CK2-dependent phosphoproteome. To address such a possibility, firstly, we evaluated the potential interaction of CIGB-300 with CK2 subunits, both in cell-free assays and cellular lysates, as well as its effect on CK2 enzymatic activity. Then, we performed a phosphoproteomic survey focusing on early inhibitory events triggered by CIGB-300 and identified those CK2 substrates significantly inhibited along with disturbed cellular processes. Altogether, we provided here the first evidence for a direct impairment of CK2 enzymatic activity by CIGB-300. Of note, both CK2-mediated inhibitory mechanisms of this anticancer peptide (i.e., substrate- and enzyme-binding mechanism) may run in parallel in tumor cells and help to explain the different anti-neoplastic effects exerted by CIGB-300 in preclinical cancer models.