Version 2 2023-04-12, 17:36Version 2 2023-04-12, 17:36
Version 1 2023-04-12, 07:29Version 1 2023-04-12, 07:29
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posted on 2023-04-12, 17:36authored byFilipe Coelho, Saidbakhrom Saidjalolov, Dimitri Moreau, Oliver Thorn-Seshold, Stefan Matile
Integrins are cell
surface proteins responsible for cell motility.
Inspired by the rich disulfide exchange chemistry of integrins, we
show here the inhibition of cell migration by cascade exchangers (CAXs),
which also enable and inhibit cell penetration by thiol-mediated uptake.
Fast-moving CAXs such as reversible Michael acceptor dimers, dithiabismepanes,
and bioinspired epidithiodiketopiperazines are best, much better than
Ellman’s reagent. The implication that integrins participate
in thiol-mediated uptake is confirmed by reduced uptake in integrin-knockdown
cells. Although thiol-mediated uptake is increasingly emerging as
a unifying pathway to bring matter into cells, its molecular basis
is essentially unknown. These results identify the integrin superfamily
as experimentally validated general cellular partners in the dynamic
covalent exchange cascades that are likely to account for thiol-mediated
uptake. The patterns identified testify to the complexity of the
dynamic covalent networks involved. This work also provides chemistry
tools to explore cell motility and expands the drug discovery potential
of CAXs from antiviral toward antithrombotic and antitumor perspectives.