Abstract
Redox cancer therapeutics target the increased reliance on intracellular antioxidant systems and enhanced susceptibility to oxidant-induced stress of some cancer cells compared to normal cells. Many of these therapeutics are thought to perturb intracellular levels of the oxidant hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), a signaling molecule that modulates a number of different processes in human cells. However, fluorescent probes for this species remain limited in their ability to detect the small perturbations induced during successful treatments. We report a fluorescent sensor based upon human peroxiredoxin-2, which acts as the natural indicator of small H2O2 fluctuations in human cells. The new probe reveals peroxide-induced oxidation in human cells below the detection limit of current probes, as well as peroxiredoxin-2 oxidation caused by two different redox cancer therapeutics in living cells. This capability will be useful in elucidating the mechanism of current redox-based therapeutics and in developing new ones.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Langford, T. F., Huang, B. K., Lim, J. B., Moon, S. J., & Sikes, H. D. (2018). Monitoring the action of redox-directed cancer therapeutics using a human peroxiredoxin-2-based probe. Nature Communications, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-05557-y
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