Abstract

Tetrastatin, a 230 amino acid sequence from collagen IV, was previously demonstrated to inhibit melanoma progression. In the present paper, we identified the minimal active sequence (QKISRCQVCVKYS: QS-13) that reproduced the anti-tumor effects of whole Tetrastatin in vivo and in vitro on melanoma cell proliferation, migration and invasion. We demonstrated that QS-13 binds to SK-MEL-28 melanoma cells through the αvβ3 integrin using blocking antibody and β3 integrin subunit siRNAs strategies. Relevant QS-13 conformations were extracted from molecular dynamics simulations and their interactions with αVβ3 integrin were analyzed by docking experiments to determine the binding areas and the QS-13 amino acids crucial for the binding. The in silico results were confirmed by in vitro experiments. Indeed, QS-13 binding to SK-MEL-28 was dependent on the presence of a disulfide-bound as shown by mass spectroscopy and the binding site on αVβ3 was located in close vicinity to the RGD binding site. QS-13 binding inhibits the FAK/PI3K/Akt pathway, a transduction pathway that is largely involved in tumor cell proliferation and migration. Taken together, our results demonstrate that the QS-13 peptide binds αvβ3 integrin in a conformation-dependent manner and is a potent antitumor agent that could target cancer cells through αVβ3.

Highlights

  • Tetrastatin, a 230 amino acid sequence from collagen IV, was previously demonstrated to inhibit melanoma progression

  • Our results demonstrate that the QS-13 peptide reproduces the Tetrastatin inhibitory effects in vitro

  • The basement membrane provides structural support for epithelial and endothelial cells, many studies have demonstrated that it acts as a potential regulator of cell behaviour

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Summary

Introduction

Tetrastatin, a 230 amino acid sequence from collagen IV, was previously demonstrated to inhibit melanoma progression. That reproduced the anti-tumor effects of whole Tetrastatin in vivo and in vitro on melanoma cell proliferation, migration and invasion. The NC1 domains of several collagen chains have been shown to inhibit angiogenesis and tumor growth[5,6,7,8,9,10] via integrin binding and through the FAK/PI3K/Akt pathway[10,11,12,13,14,15,16]. The NC1 α4(IV) domain, named Tetrastatin, was shown to exert potent anti-tumor activity both in vitro and in vivo in a human melanoma model by decreasing the proliferative and invasive properties of melanoma www.nature.com/scientificreports/

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