AI Article Synopsis

  • Chemotherapies may induce cell death by elevating levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS), but the specific mechanisms and proteins involved are not fully understood.* -
  • Researchers investigated 11 different chemotherapies and discovered both unique and common protein targets, such as ribosomal components, highlighting a potential method through which these drugs affect protein translation.* -
  • The study centered on the protein CHK1, which plays a role in sensing nuclear hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) and regulates mitochondrial function, revealing a pathway that can help cancer cells resist platinum-based chemotherapy in ovarian cancers.*

Article Abstract

Multiple chemotherapies are proposed to cause cell death in part by increasing the steady-state levels of cellular reactive oxygen species (ROS). However, for most of these drugs exactly how the resultant ROS function and are sensed is poorly understood. In particular, it's unclear which proteins the ROS modify and their roles in chemotherapy sensitivity/resistance. To answer these questions, we examined 11 chemotherapies with an integrated proteogenomic approach identifying many unique targets for these drugs but also shared ones including ribosomal components, suggesting one mechanism by which chemotherapies regulate translation. We focus on CHK1 which we find is a nuclear H O sensor that promotes an anti-ROS cellular program. CHK1 acts by phosphorylating the mitochondrial-DNA binding protein SSBP1, preventing its mitochondrial localization, which in turn decreases nuclear H O . Our results reveal a druggable nucleus-to-mitochondria ROS sensing pathway required to resolve nuclear H O accumulation, which mediates resistance to platinum-based chemotherapies in ovarian cancers.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10028958PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.03.11.532189DOI Listing

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