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Many drugs are effective in the early stage of treatment, but patients develop drug resistance after a certain period of treatment, causing failure of the therapy. An important example is Herceptin, a popular monoclonal antibody drug for breast cancer by specifically targeting human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (Her2). Here we demonstrate a quantitative binding kinetics analysis of drug-target interactions to investigate the molecular scale origin of drug resistance. Using a surface plasmon resonance imaging, we measured the in situ Herceptin-Her2 binding kinetics in single intact cancer cells for the first time, and observed significantly weakened Herceptin-Her2 interactions in Herceptin-resistant cells, compared to those in Herceptin-sensitive cells. We further showed that the steric hindrance of Mucin-4, a membrane protein, was responsible for the altered drug-receptor binding. This effect of a third molecule on drug-receptor interactions cannot be studied using traditional purified protein methods, demonstrating the importance of the present intact cell-based binding kinetics analysis.
- Wang, Wei (Author)
- Yin, Linliang (Author)
- Gonzalez-Malerva, Laura (Author)
- Wang, Shaopeng (Author)
- Yu, Xiaobo (Author)
- Eaton, Seron (Author)
- Zhang, Shengtao (Author)
- Chen, Hong-Yuan (Author)
- LaBaer, Joshua (Author)
- Tao, Nongjian (Author)
- Biodesign Institute (Contributor)
Wang, W., Yin, L., Gonzalez-Malerva, L., Wang, S., Yu, X., Eaton, S., . . . Tao, N. (2014). In situ drug-receptor binding kinetics in single cells: a quantitative label-free study of anti-tumor drug resistance. Scientific Reports, 4(1). doi:10.1038/srep06609
- 2017-07-14 12:37:17
- 2021-12-03 01:26:45
- 2 years 11 months ago