Scientists unlock molecular structure of key protein linked to cancer, neurological diseases

· News-Medical
Matthew Goetz, M.D., study co-author, medical oncologist, Mayo Clinic Comprehensive Cancer CenterFor decades, scientists have been trying to understand how these proteins function. These findings create new opportunities to develop more precise therapies for cancer and other diseases."

Solving a 4-decade-long mystery

Since PKC was first discovered in the 1980s, scientists have been unable to determine the structure of full-length human PKC enzymes, limiting efforts to understand how they function and how they might be targeted therapeutically.

"By producing the protein in human cells, we were able to obtain high-quality material that enabled us to finally see how this enzyme is organized and regulated," says Dr. Schellenberg, a molecular biologist at Mayo Clinic. "Now, we can begin investigating how changes in these proteins contribute to disease and how new therapies might selectively influence their activity."

How a breast cancer drug inhibits PKCβ

It has been known for decades that PKCβ becomes activated when it interacts with lipid membranes inside cells, but it was not known how this could happen. Structural studies revealed that when membrane lipids bind to PKC, they act like a molecular lever, shifting the enzyme from a closed, inactive state to an open, membrane-bound active state. These membranes trigger changes in the protein, exposing its active site and switching it on.

The researchers then combined structural biology, biochemistry and cellular studies to understand how endoxifen affects PKCβ. They found that endoxifen inhibits PKCβ through an allosteric mechanism, meaning it changes the protein's behavior without directly competing for its active site. The drug appears to stabilize PKCβ at cellular membranes, triggering changes that ultimately lead to its degradation.

"This mechanism is fundamentally different from previous PKC inhibitors that have been tested over the years," Dr. Goetz says. "That distinction may help explain why endoxifen shows biological effects that earlier compounds did not."

Implications for precision medicine

The findings establish a framework for understanding how different PKC family members function in health and disease. Some PKC isoforms may promote tumor growth while others may suppress it. The PKC family includes 10 related proteins, each with distinct roles. Determining when each protein should be activated or inhibited has remained a major unanswered question.

"This study gives us the tools to ask those questions in a much more sophisticated way," Dr. Schellenberg explains. "We can now investigate how different PKC proteins contribute to cancer and design drugs that target the right protein in the right context."

Mayo Clinic researchers are currently studying endoxifen in premenopausal women with estrogen receptor-positive breast cancer and investigating whether its effects on PKCβ contribute to its anticancer activity. The team is planning future work to expand beyond PKCβ to all 10 members of the PKC family, seeking to understand how each enzyme functions and responds to therapeutic compounds in its own unique way.

"We've opened a new door," says Dr. Goetz. "For the first time, we can see how these proteins are organized, how they function and how they may be targeted with greater precision. That understanding could help guide the next generation of therapies."

Source:

Mayo Clinic

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