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Protein that switches cancers from inflammation to proliferation identified

Research uncovers the role of PAD4 in cancers, especially those with early stage inflammation

Date:
February 5, 2016
Source:
University of Oxford
Summary:
PAD4 has been observed in cancers but its role was unclear. An Oxford University team have found that PAD4 citrullinates protein E2F-1, which causes it to form a protein complex with BRD4 that drives expression of inflammatory genes.
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Oxford University scientists researching PAD4, a protein that plays a role in the development of inflammatory diseases like arthritis and which is regularly found in cancers have uncovered the protein's role in cancer development. Their results are published online by the journal Science Advances.

Peptidyl arginine deiminase 4 (PAD4) is an enzyme that plays a role in genetic expression -- turning our genetic code into functional products in the body.

Professor Nick La Thangue from Oxford University's Oncology department explained: 'As our understanding of the mechanisms underlying inflammation has increased, interest in PAD enzymes as targets for treatments has grown. PAD4's presence in cancer was well known but its role was not -- rather like continually seeing someone at crime scenes but not being able to prove they're involved.'

The team therefore set out to understand the mechanisms by which PAD4 was involved. They found that PAD4 is attracted by another protein called E2F-1, which regulates various activities within cells. E2F-1 plays a role in cancer spread -- proliferation as it's called -- but the scientists found that PAD4, working with another protein called BRD4, could switch E2F-1 from promoting proliferation to promoting inflammation.

PAD4 changes a part of the E2F-1 protein, an amino acid called arginine, into another amino acid called citrulline. The resulting citrullinated E2F-1 attracts BRD4, which is able to bind to parts of the E2F known as acetylation marks. The resulting protein complex drives the expression of inflammatory genes, so increasing the amount of inflammation.

Having established that both PAD4 and BRD4 played a role, the scientists then looked at what happened when the two proteins were suppressed. Using mice with arthritis, they administered two treatments that inhibited PAD4 and BRD4.

Professor La Thangue said: 'Suppressing either of the proteins reduced the symptoms of arthritis but suppressing both saw a marked reduction. Tests also showed that inflammatory products in the body of the mice were reduced. That confirmed the role of both PAD4 and BRD4 is switching E2F-1 to an inflammation role.

'Inflammation plays a key role in a number of cancers. For example, bowel cancer has an early inflammatory stage. By understanding the biological mechanisms that underlie these cancers, we are better placed to find effective treatments.'


Story Source:

Materials provided by University of Oxford. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


Journal Reference:

  1. Fatemeh Ghari, Anne-Marie Quirke, Shonagh Munro, Joanna Kawalkowska, Sarah Picaud, Joanna Mcgouran, Venkataraman Subramanian, Aaron Muth, Richard Williams, Benedikt Kessler, Paul R. Thompson, Panagis Fillipakopoulos, Stefan Knapp,Patrick J. Venables and Nicholas B. La Thangue. Citrullination-acetylation interplay guides E2F-1 activity during the inflammatory response. Science Advances, 2016 DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.1501257

Cite This Page:

University of Oxford. "Protein that switches cancers from inflammation to proliferation identified." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 5 February 2016. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2016/02/160205144515.htm>.
University of Oxford. (2016, February 5). Protein that switches cancers from inflammation to proliferation identified. ScienceDaily. Retrieved April 26, 2024 from www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2016/02/160205144515.htm
University of Oxford. "Protein that switches cancers from inflammation to proliferation identified." ScienceDaily. www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2016/02/160205144515.htm (accessed April 26, 2024).

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