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Structural characterization and in vivo pro-tumor properties of a highly conserved matrikine

Elastin-derived peptides (EDPs) exert protumor activities by increasing tumor growth, migration and invasion. A number of studies have highlighted the potential of VGVAPG consensus sequence-derived elastin-like polypeptides whose physicochemical properties and biocompatibility are particularly suita...

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Autores principales: Da Silva, Jordan, Lameiras, Pedro, Beljebbar, Abdelilah, Berquand, Alexandre, Villemin, Matthieu, Ramont, Laurent, Dukic, Sylvain, Nuzillard, Jean-Marc, Molinari, Michael, Gautier, Mathieu, Brassart-Pasco, Sylvie, Brassart, Bertrand
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5915158/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29707150
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.24894
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author Da Silva, Jordan
Lameiras, Pedro
Beljebbar, Abdelilah
Berquand, Alexandre
Villemin, Matthieu
Ramont, Laurent
Dukic, Sylvain
Nuzillard, Jean-Marc
Molinari, Michael
Gautier, Mathieu
Brassart-Pasco, Sylvie
Brassart, Bertrand
author_facet Da Silva, Jordan
Lameiras, Pedro
Beljebbar, Abdelilah
Berquand, Alexandre
Villemin, Matthieu
Ramont, Laurent
Dukic, Sylvain
Nuzillard, Jean-Marc
Molinari, Michael
Gautier, Mathieu
Brassart-Pasco, Sylvie
Brassart, Bertrand
author_sort Da Silva, Jordan
collection PubMed
description Elastin-derived peptides (EDPs) exert protumor activities by increasing tumor growth, migration and invasion. A number of studies have highlighted the potential of VGVAPG consensus sequence-derived elastin-like polypeptides whose physicochemical properties and biocompatibility are particularly suitable for in vivo applications, such as drug delivery and tissue engineering. However, among the EDPs, the influence of elastin-derived nonapeptides (xGxPGxGxG consensus sequence) remains unknown. Here, we show that the AGVPGLGVG elastin peptide (AG-9) present in domain-26 of tropoelastin is more conserved than the VGVAPG elastin peptide (VG-6) from domain-24 in mammals. The results demonstrate that the structural features of AG-9 and VG-6 peptides are similar. CD, NMR and FTIR spectroscopies show that AG-9 and VG-6 present the same conformation, which includes a mixture of random coils and β-turn structures. On the other hand, the supraorganization differs between peptides, as demonstrated by AFM. The VG-6 peptide gathers in spots, whereas the AG-9 peptide aggregates into short amyloid-like fibrils. An in vivo study showed that AG-9 peptides promote tumor progression to a greater extent than do VG-6 peptides. These results were confirmed by in vitro studies such as 2D and 3D proliferation assays, migration assays, adhesion assays, proteinase secretion studies and pseudotube formation assays to investigate angiogenesis. Our findings suggest the possibility that the AG-9 peptide present in patient sera may dramatically influence cancer progression and could be used in the design of new, innovative antitumor therapies.
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spelling pubmed-59151582018-04-27 Structural characterization and in vivo pro-tumor properties of a highly conserved matrikine Da Silva, Jordan Lameiras, Pedro Beljebbar, Abdelilah Berquand, Alexandre Villemin, Matthieu Ramont, Laurent Dukic, Sylvain Nuzillard, Jean-Marc Molinari, Michael Gautier, Mathieu Brassart-Pasco, Sylvie Brassart, Bertrand Oncotarget Research Paper Elastin-derived peptides (EDPs) exert protumor activities by increasing tumor growth, migration and invasion. A number of studies have highlighted the potential of VGVAPG consensus sequence-derived elastin-like polypeptides whose physicochemical properties and biocompatibility are particularly suitable for in vivo applications, such as drug delivery and tissue engineering. However, among the EDPs, the influence of elastin-derived nonapeptides (xGxPGxGxG consensus sequence) remains unknown. Here, we show that the AGVPGLGVG elastin peptide (AG-9) present in domain-26 of tropoelastin is more conserved than the VGVAPG elastin peptide (VG-6) from domain-24 in mammals. The results demonstrate that the structural features of AG-9 and VG-6 peptides are similar. CD, NMR and FTIR spectroscopies show that AG-9 and VG-6 present the same conformation, which includes a mixture of random coils and β-turn structures. On the other hand, the supraorganization differs between peptides, as demonstrated by AFM. The VG-6 peptide gathers in spots, whereas the AG-9 peptide aggregates into short amyloid-like fibrils. An in vivo study showed that AG-9 peptides promote tumor progression to a greater extent than do VG-6 peptides. These results were confirmed by in vitro studies such as 2D and 3D proliferation assays, migration assays, adhesion assays, proteinase secretion studies and pseudotube formation assays to investigate angiogenesis. Our findings suggest the possibility that the AG-9 peptide present in patient sera may dramatically influence cancer progression and could be used in the design of new, innovative antitumor therapies. Impact Journals LLC 2018-04-03 /pmc/articles/PMC5915158/ /pubmed/29707150 http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.24894 Text en Copyright: © 2018 Da Silva et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/) 3.0 (CC BY 3.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Da Silva, Jordan
Lameiras, Pedro
Beljebbar, Abdelilah
Berquand, Alexandre
Villemin, Matthieu
Ramont, Laurent
Dukic, Sylvain
Nuzillard, Jean-Marc
Molinari, Michael
Gautier, Mathieu
Brassart-Pasco, Sylvie
Brassart, Bertrand
Structural characterization and in vivo pro-tumor properties of a highly conserved matrikine
title Structural characterization and in vivo pro-tumor properties of a highly conserved matrikine
title_full Structural characterization and in vivo pro-tumor properties of a highly conserved matrikine
title_fullStr Structural characterization and in vivo pro-tumor properties of a highly conserved matrikine
title_full_unstemmed Structural characterization and in vivo pro-tumor properties of a highly conserved matrikine
title_short Structural characterization and in vivo pro-tumor properties of a highly conserved matrikine
title_sort structural characterization and in vivo pro-tumor properties of a highly conserved matrikine
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5915158/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29707150
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.24894
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