Carnegie Mellon’s Philip R. LeDuc Discovers New Protein Function That Could Save Lives
January 12, 2010
Contact: Chriss Swaney
Carnegie Mellon University
412.268.5776
PITTSBURGH—Carnegie Mellon University's Philip R. LeDuc and his collaborators in Massachusetts and Taiwan have discovered a new function of a protein that could ultimately unlock the mystery of how these workhorses of the body play a central role in the mechanics of biological processes in people.
"What we have done is find a new function of a protein that helps
control cell behavior from a mechanics perspective," said LeDuc, an associate
professor of mechanical engineering with courtesy appointments in the
Biomedical Engineering, Biological Sciences and Computational Biology
departments.
"For over 15 years, researchers have been mainly focusing on a protein
called Integrin to study these cell functions, but our team found that another
lesser known protein called Syndecan-4 is extremely important in cell behavior
in a field called MechanoBiology (a field linking mechanics and biology).
Syndecan-4 is known to play an essential role in a variety of diseases like
cancer," LeDuc said.
LeDuc's
new findings appear in the Dec. 29 edition of the prestigious journal Proceedings
of the National Academy of Sciences along with complementary work that is
appearing in another highly respected journal, Nature Protocols.
Essentially what his research does is take a look at how a protein's
shape and form determines how it functions in the human body from a mechanics
perspective. Proteins are composed of long chains of amino acids than can form
bonds with other molecules in a chain, kinking, twisting and folding into
complicated, three-dimensional shapes, such as helices or densely furrowed
globular structures.
"These folded shapes are immensely important because they can define a
protein's function in the cell," said LeDuc, who is also developing novel
biologically inspired diagnostic approaches and materials as well as
computational methods to understand molecular behavior.
LeDuc said
his research finds that some protein shapes fit perfectly into cell receptors,
turning chemical processes on and off, like a key in a lock. With mechanics
changing the shape of proteins, LeDuc says the key might no longer fit into the
lock, and serious consequences in the body can occur when proteins fail to
assume their preordained shapes or fail to connect properly.
"Misguided proteins have been linked to disease such as cancer, arthritis and wound healing, among others," LeDuc said. "Our research is looking at how protein shapes affect cells and how cell biomechanics impacts the entire process."