1. Academic Validation
  2. An antagonist of dishevelled protein-protein interaction suppresses beta-catenin-dependent tumor cell growth

An antagonist of dishevelled protein-protein interaction suppresses beta-catenin-dependent tumor cell growth

  • Cancer Res. 2007 Jan 15;67(2):573-9. doi: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-06-2726.
Naoaki Fujii 1 Liang You Zhidong Xu Kazutsugu Uematsu Jufang Shan Biao He Iwao Mikami Lillian R Edmondson Geoffrey Neale Jie Zheng R Kiplin Guy David M Jablons
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Pharmaceutical Chemistry, Thoracic Oncology Labratory, University of California San Francisco, and Department of Structural Biology, St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, Memphis, TN 38105, USA. Naoaki.Fujii@stjude.org
Abstract

Recent progress in the development of inhibitors of protein-protein interactions has opened the door for developing drugs that act by novel and selective mechanisms. Building on that work, we designed a small-molecule inhibitor of the Wnt signaling pathway, which is aberrantly activated across a wide range of human tumors. The compound, named FJ9, disrupts the interaction between the Frizzed-7 Wnt receptor and the PDZ domain of Dishevelled, down-regulating canonical Wnt signaling and suppressing tumor cell growth. The antitumorigenic effects of FJ9 were pronounced, including induction of Apoptosis in human Cancer cell lines and tumor growth inhibition in a mouse xenograft model. FJ9 is thus among the first non-peptide inhibitors to show therapeutic efficacy through disruption of PDZ protein-protein interactions.

Figures
Products