Researchers at the University of Copenhagen have come closer to understanding how an enzyme that appears to be important to cancer development behaves inside the cells.
The new study, published in the scientific journal Nature Communications, shows first of all that the enzyme METTL13 helps control the formation of new proteins in the cells.
“Mistakes in the production of proteins are undesirable, as we know from other studies that it can result in the development of cancer tumours and degenerative brain disorders like Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s. Therefore, the new knowledge of how this enzyme functions is significant,” says Professor Jesper Velgaard Olsen from the Novo Nordisk Foundation Center for Protein Research.
The enzyme helps control protein synthesis by placing so-called methyl marks on a particular protein called eEF1A.
“If methyl is not attached correctly to the protein it will not be able to do its job properly. And that again affects the formation of proteins in the cell, which will take place at a suboptimal pace, and even though that may not sound so bad, it appears to be connected with very serious disorders,” says Postdoc Magnus Jakobsson from the Novo Nordisk Foundation Center for Protein Research.
The researchers have shown how the enzyme functions by studying isolated human cancer cells using advanced mass spectrometers which, in short, are able to identify and quantify proteins and their methyl-modifications in a cell.
Now the researchers hope the study will lead to the development of methods and drugs able to target and assure the enzyme to function as intended in our cells.
The study is funded by the Lundbeck Foundation and the Novo Nordisk Foundation, among others.
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