Revealing the Underestimated Anticancer Effect of Azurin by Mechanical Unfolding

ACS Biomater Sci Eng. 2021 Oct 11;7(10):4809-4818. doi: 10.1021/acsbiomaterials.1c00934. Epub 2021 Sep 24.

Abstract

As a potential anticancer agent, azurin has attracted extensive attraction among chemists, physicists, and material scientists. Its structural and unfolding/folding information has been partially understood, but some detailed information, such as the difference in the unfolding processes between apo-azurin and holo-azurin, the mechanical stability, and the role of the copper cluster in its stability, has not been addressed adequately, especially at the single-molecule level. Here, we employed AFM-based single-molecule force spectroscopy to investigate the unfolding process of azurin in the apo and holo forms under an external force. The results indicated that the unfolding processes of apo-azurin and holo-azurin are different, and holo-azurin requires a stronger force to unfold than does apo-azurin. The copper cluster exhibited a more significant impact on the stability and the folding process of holo-azurin: the copper cluster was completely broken, and the copper ion left the unfolded azurin during the unfolding process of azurin. We suspected that the presence of the disulfide bond in azurin made the unfolding of the copper cluster different from that in pseudoazurin, which is also a type I copper protein like azurin. Rarely reported in previous studies, the mechanical strength of the Cu-N(His) bond of the copper cluster was obtained in this study, which is weaker than that of most metal-S(Cys) bonds but higher than that of the Fe-N(His) bond. Altogether, our results offer a possible new scenario for azurin to widely extend its anticancer activity.

Keywords: azurin; cancer; copper ions; mechanical strength; mechanical unfolding.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Azurin* / metabolism
  • Copper
  • Metals
  • Protein Folding

Substances

  • Metals
  • Azurin
  • Copper