scholarly journals Shikonin Directly Targets Mitochondria and Causes Mitochondrial Dysfunction in Cancer Cells

2012 ◽  
Vol 2012 ◽  
pp. 1-15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benjamin Wiench ◽  
Tolga Eichhorn ◽  
Malte Paulsen ◽  
Thomas Efferth

Chemotherapy is a mainstay of cancer treatment. Due to increased drug resistance and the severe side effects of currently used therapeutics, new candidate compounds are required for improvement of therapy success. Shikonin, a natural naphthoquinone, was used in traditional Chinese medicine for the treatment of different inflammatory diseases and recent studies revealed the anticancer activities of shikonin. We found that shikonin has strong cytotoxic effects on 15 cancer cell lines, including multidrug-resistant cell lines. Transcriptome-wide mRNA expression studies showed that shikonin induced genetic pathways regulating cell cycle, mitochondrial function, levels of reactive oxygen species, and cytoskeletal formation. Taking advantage of the inherent fluorescence of shikonin, we analyzed its uptake and distribution in live cells with high spatial and temporal resolution using flow cytometry and confocal microscopy. Shikonin was specifically accumulated in the mitochondria, and this accumulation was associated with a shikonin-dependent deregulation of cellular Ca2+and ROS levels. This deregulation led to a breakdown of the mitochondrial membrane potential, dysfunction of microtubules, cell-cycle arrest, and ultimately induction of apoptosis. Seeing as both the metabolism and the structure of mitochondria show marked differences between cancer cells and normal cells, shikonin is a promising candidate for the next generation of chemotherapy.

2018 ◽  
Vol 47 (2) ◽  
pp. 489-504 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wei Yan ◽  
Tao Yang ◽  
Jianhong Yang ◽  
Taijin Wang ◽  
Yamei Yu ◽  
...  

Background/Aims: Many tubulin inhibitors are in clinical use as anti-cancer drugs. In our previous study, a novel series of 4-substituted coumarins derivatives were identified as novel tubulin inhibitors. Here, we report the anti-cancer activity and underlying mechanism of one of the 4-substituted coumarins derivatives (SKLB060). Methods: The anti-cancer activity of SKLB060 was tested on 13 different cancer cell lines and four xenograft cancer models. Immunofluorescence staining, cell cycle analysis, and tubulin polymerization assay were employed to study the inhibition of tubulin. N, N ′-Ethylenebis(iodoacetamide) assay was used to measure binding to the colchicine site. Wound-healing migration and tube formation assays were performed on human umbilical vascular endothelial cells to study anti-vascular activity (the ability to inhibit blood vessel growth). Mitotic block reversibility and structural biology assays were used to investigate the SKLB060-tubulin bound model. Results: SKLB060 inhibited tubulin polymerization and subsequently induced G2/M cell cycle arrest and apoptosis in cancer cells. SKLB060 bound to the colchicine site of β-tubulin and showed antivascular activity in vitro. Moreover, SKLB060 induced reversible cell cycle arrest and reversible inhibition of tubulin polymerization. A mitotic block reversibility assay showed that the effects of SKLB060 have greater reversibility than those of colcemid (a reversible tubulin inhibitor), indicating that SKLB060 binds to tubulin in a totally reversible manner. The crystal structures of SKLB060-tubulin complexes confirmed that SKLB060 binds to the colchicine site, and the natural coumarin ring in SKLB060 enables reversible binding. Conclusions: These results reveal that SKLB060 is a powerful and reversible microtubule inhibitor that binds to the colchicine site and is effective in multidrug-resistant cell lines.


Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 1359-1359
Author(s):  
Ana A Tula-Sanchez ◽  
Aaron Havas ◽  
Peter Alonge ◽  
Mary E Klein ◽  
Taralyn Y Rogers ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 1359 Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) is the most common type of Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma (NHL) throughout the world. DLBCL is an aggressive, heterogeneous disease with two major recognized cell-of-origin subtypes: “germinal center” (GCB) and “activated B-cell like” (ABC), the latter having the worse prognosis. Overall, DLBCL remains fatal for about 30% patients due to relapse or lack of response to initial therapy. Resistant/relapsed DLBCL patients could benefit from the addition of new promising antiproliferative drugs, such as histone deacetylase inhibitors (HDACIs), to current chemotherapy regimens. So far, Vorinostat and Romidepsin, two structurally different HDACIs, have been approved for the treatment of hematological cancers. Despite their proven antiproliferative, pro-apoptotic effects, response to these drugs against DLBCL in clinical trials have been variable, ranging from complete/partial responses to stable disease to no response. The mechanisms of action of these drugs are still poorly understood, mainly because the function of their target deacetylases are cell context-specific. Therefore, characterization of the specific anticancer mechanisms of action of HDACIs in DLBCL could potentially lead to development of novel combinatorial drug regimens effective against resistant/relapsed DLBCL patients. To define HDACI action in DLBCL, we treated DLBCL-derived cell lines with PXD101, (Belinostat); a hydroxamate HDACI, like Vorinostat. We demonstrated that PXD101 is able to produce 24h growth inhibition (IC50) at submicromolar concentrations regardless of the DLBCL subtype. The 24h IC50values were used in all the subsequent experiments. Cell cycle and apoptosis analysis by flow cytometry indicated that PXD101 produces cytotoxic effects on two of the GCB cell lines; DB and OCILY19 underwent G2/M cell cycle arrest at 24 hours followed by apoptosis at 48 and 72 hours of treatment. Immunoblotting of PARP and caspase-3 cleavage further confirmed apoptosis. More importantly, when cells were treated for only 8 hours with PXD101 and then the drug was removed for 24 hours, cells showed apoptosis rates similar to those observed with 48h of continuous treatment; suggesting that once that these cell lines are exposed to the drug they rapidly commit to cell death. Thus, we have classified the DB and OCILY19 cell lines as models for sensitivity to the apoptotic effects of HDACI. In contrast, PXD101 induced cytostatic effects on the GCB cell line SUDHL4 and ABC cell lines U2932 and SUDHL8. All three cell lines showed G1 phase cell cycle arrest with little apoptosis. The G1 arrest is reversible after 48 hours of drug removal. Because of the lack of cell death and the reversibility of cell cycle arrest, we have classified these cell lines as models of HDACI resistance. Previous studies have shown that induction of p21 is responsible for G1 arrest in cells treated with HDACIs. Western blot analysis showed that none of the cell lines, except U2932, express p21, but upon PXD101, p21 protein levels were induced at 24, 48 and 72 hours of PXD101 treatment in SUDHL4 and U2932. In contrast, p21 was induced to a lesser extent in OCILY19 and DB, but its expression was not sustained beyond 24 hours of treatment. Since we also observed a corresponding loss in Rb phosphorylation, we tested the effect of PXD101 on cyclin dependent kinase 2 (CDK2) activity. This enzyme complex is responsible for entry into S phase and is inhibited by association with p21. In all three resistant cell lines CDK2 activity was reduced after only 24 hours of treatment with PXD101. The loss in activity was correlated with increased association with p21, as determined by immunoprecipitation. These results indicate that sustained upregulation of p21 by HDACIs such as PXD101 plays a role in bringing about G1 arrest that may protect DLBCL cells from apoptosis. Combined treatment with therapeutics that prevent p21 upregulation and G1 arrest may work synergistically with HDACIs to trigger apoptosis in HDACI-resistant cell lines. To that end, we have begun analysis of the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor, flavopiridol, and have shown that it prevents both p21 upregulation and G1 arrest in the HDACi-resistant DLBCL cell lines. Studies to measure synergism with PXD101 in bringing about cell death are currently underway. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2006 ◽  
Vol 66 (6) ◽  
pp. 3238-3247 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria Grazia Villani ◽  
Valentina Appierto ◽  
Elena Cavadini ◽  
Arianna Bettiga ◽  
Alessandro Prinetti ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Haibiao Xie ◽  
Kaifang Ma ◽  
Kenan Zhang ◽  
Jingcheng Zhou ◽  
Lei Li ◽  
...  

AbstractTP53 is a classic tumor suppressor, but its role in kidney cancer remains unclear. In our study, we tried to explain the role of p53 in kidney cancer through the p53-related enhancer RNA pathway. Functional experiments were used to explore whether P53-bound enhancer regions 2 (p53BER2) has a role in the cell cycle and senescence response of TP53-wild type (WT) renal cancer cells in vitro or vivo. RNA-sequencing was used to identify the potential target of p53BER2. The results showed that the expression level of P53BER2 was downregulated in renal cancer tissues and cell lines, further dual-luciferase experiments and APR-256-reactivated experiments showed p53BER2 expresses in a p53-dependent way. Moreover, knockdown p53BER2 could reverse nutlin-3-induced cytotoxic effect in TP53-WT cell lines. Further exploration showed the downregulation of p53BER2 could reverse nutlin-3-induced G1-arrest and senescence in TP53-WT cell lines. What is more, the knockdown of p53BER2 showed resistance to nutlin-3 treatment in vivo. Additionally, we found BRCA2 could be regulated by p53BER2 in vitro and vivo; further experiment showed p53BER2 could induce cell-cycle arrest and DNA repair by mediating BRCA2. In summary, the p53-associated enhancer RNA-p53BER2 mediates the cell cycle and senescence of p53 in TP53-WT renal cancer cells.


2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (9) ◽  
pp. 5022
Author(s):  
Ying Gao ◽  
Sarah L. Miles ◽  
Piyali Dasgupta ◽  
Gary O. Rankin ◽  
Stephen Cutler ◽  
...  

Ovarian cancer is a fatal gynecological cancer because of a lack of early diagnosis, which often relapses as chemoresistant. Trichodermin, a trichothecene first isolated from Trichoderma viride, is an inhibitor of eukaryotic protein synthesis. However, whether trichodermin is able to suppress ovarian cancer or not was unclear. In this study, trichodermin (0.5 µM or greater) significantly decreased the proliferation of two ovarian cancer cell lines A2780/CP70 and OVCAR-3. Normal ovarian IOSE 346 cells were much less susceptible to trichodermin than the cancer cell lines. Trichodermin predominantly inhibited ovarian cancer cells by inducing G0/G1 cell cycle arrest rather than apoptosis. Trichodermin decreased the expression of cyclin D1, CDK4, CDK2, retinoblastoma protein, Cdc25A, and c-Myc but showed little effect on the expression of p21Waf1/Cip1, p27Kip1, or p16Ink4a. c-Myc was a key target of trichodermin. Trichodermin regulated the expression of Cdc25A and its downstream proteins via c-Myc. Overexpression of c-Myc attenuated trichodermin’s anti-ovarian cancer activity. In addition, trichodermin decelerated tumor growth in BALB/c nude mice, proving its effectiveness in vivo. These findings suggested that trichodermin has the potential to contribute to the treatment of ovarian cancer.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Caleb K. Stubbs ◽  
Marco Biancucci ◽  
Vania Vidimar ◽  
Karla J. F. Satchell

ABSTRACTRAS is one of the most frequently mutated oncogenes in cancer with ~30% of all human tumors harboring a mutation in either HRAS, NRAS, or KRAS isoforms. Despite countless efforts for development of small molecule inhibitors for RAS, it remains an elusive target in the clinic. Here we demonstrated that the pan-RAS biological inhibitor RAS/RAP1-specific endopeptidase (RRSP) has proteolytic activity in ‘Ras-less’ mouse embryonic fibroblasts expressing human RAS isoforms (H/N/KRAS) or major oncogenic KRAS mutants (G12C, G12V, G12D, G13D, and Q61R). The cleavage of RAS inhibited phosphorylation of ERK and cell proliferation. To investigate how RAS processing affects colon cancer cells, we tested RRSP against KRAS-dependent (SW620 and GP5d) and KRAS-independent (HCT-116, SW1463, and HT-29) cell lines and found that RRSP inhibited growth. The cleavage of RAS was cytotoxic in some cell lines and induced either irreversible cell cycle arrest or uncharacterized growth inhibition in others. The G1 cell cycle arrest in some colon cancer cells was mediated through rescue of p27 (Kip1) protein expression resulting in reduced phosphorylation of retinoblastoma protein. Together, this work demonstrated that complete ablation of RAS in cells induces growth inhibition, but the mechanism of inhibition can vary in different tumor cell lines. This ability of RAS processing to halt cell proliferation by multiple strategies highlights RRSP both as a potential anti-tumor therapy and as a tool for studying RAS signaling across tumor types.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Portia P Raphela-Choma ◽  
Mthokozisi BC Simelane ◽  
Mpho S Choene

Abstract Background Natural compounds derived from various medicinal plants may activate several physiological pathways which can be valuable to diseases such as cancer. Isomukaadial acetate has previously been shown to possess antimalarial and anti-diabetic properties. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the antiproliferative effects of isomukaadial acetate on breast and ovarian cancer cell lines. Method Cell viability assays were conducted using AlamarBlue assay and xCELLigence system. Cell apoptosis and cell cycle arrest were determined and analyzed by flow cytometer. Effector caspase (3/7) activation was evaluated by caspase Glo®-3/7 reagent and gene expression was analyzed by Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction. Results The Alamar blue assay and xCELLigence showed that Iso-mukaadial acetate exhibited anti-proliferative effects on MDA-MB 231, RMG-1, and HEK 293 cell lines in a concentration-dependent manner. Iso-mukaadial acetate induced apoptosis in both cancer cell lines caused cell cycle arrest at the S phase (RMG-1) and early G2 phase (MDA-MB 231) and expressed caspase 3/7 activity in MDA-MB 231 and RMG-1 cells. BAX and p21 were upregulated in MDA-MB 231 and RMG-1 cells after treatment. Conclusion IMA significantly inhibited cancer growth and induced cell apoptosis with cell cycle modulation. IMA may be considered a promising candidate for the development of anticancer drugs either for its cytotoxic or cytostatic effect Furthermore, IMA requires to be further studied more to clearly understand its mechanism of action on cancer cells.


Molecules ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 23 (8) ◽  
pp. 1996 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bartolomeo Bosco ◽  
Andrea Defant ◽  
Andrea Messina ◽  
Tania Incitti ◽  
Denise Sighel ◽  
...  

Reversine is a potent antitumor 2,6-diamino-substituted purine acting as an Aurora kinases inhibitor and interfering with cancer cell cycle progression. In this study we describe three reversine-related molecules, designed by docking calculation, that present structural modifications in the diamino units at positions 2 and 6. We investigated the conformations of the most stable prototropic tautomers of one of these molecules, the N6-cyclohexyl-N6-methyl-N2-phenyl-7H-purine-2,6-diamine (3), by Density Functional Theory (DFT) calculation in the gas phase, water and chloroform, the last solvent considered to give insights into the detection of broad signals in NMR analysis. In all cases the HN(9) tautomer resulted more stable than the HN(7) form, but the most stable conformations changed in different solvents. Molecules 1–3 were evaluated on MCF-7 breast and HCT116 colorectal cancer cell lines showing that, while being less cytotoxic than reversine, they still caused cell cycle arrest in G2/M phase and polyploidy. Unlike reversine, which produced a pronounced cell cycle arrest in G2/M phase in all the cell lines used, similar concentrations of 1–3 were effective only in cells where p53 was deleted or down-regulated. Therefore, our findings support a potential selective role of these structurally simplified, reversine-related molecules in p53-defective cancer cells.


Blood ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 134 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 2075-2075
Author(s):  
Martine Humbert ◽  
Armelle Goubard ◽  
Colin Mansfield ◽  
Olivier Hermine ◽  
Patrice Dubreuil ◽  
...  

We have identified the small chemical molecule AB8939 as being a structurally novel, synthesized tubulin inhibitor that can circumvent resistance mechanisms known to limit the effectiveness of existing tubulin inhibitors; e.g., P-glycoprotein (Pgp) and myeloperoxidase (MPO) mediated resistance. A series of in vitro preclinical studies provide proof-of-concept that AB8939 has broad applicability as a potent anticancer drug, particularly in tumors of hematopoietic and lymphoid tissues, including acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Regarding mechanism of action, x-ray crystallography demonstrated that AB8939 binds to the colchicine-binding site on the beta-subunit of tubulin. Cell cycle arrest in the G2/M phase was evaluated using HCT116 cells (a human colorectal tumor), treated at various concentrations of AB8939 for 24 hours. It was seen that AB8939 produced a strong mitotic arrest at the sub-micromolar concentration range (90% of cells in G2/M phase at 10 nM), which was of comparable strength to that of established microtubule targeting agents, each at a concentration of 100 nM. Additional assays using cytarabine (Ara-C) resistant MOLM14 AML cells confirmed this activity, also demonstrating dose dependent (2 to 20 nM) G2/M phase cell cycle arrest in patient-derived AML blasts and that G2/M cell cycle arrest lead to cellular death by apoptosis at nanomolar concentrations. The effect of AB8939 (100 nM) on the integrity of the microtubule and actin networks was tested in 3T3NIH cells (murine embryonic fibroblast cell line). AB8939 induced a rapid (within 1 hour) and radical destabilization of the microtubule network but did not affect the actin network. Similarly, destabilization of the microtubule network was observed in human primary cardiomyocytes and primary human lung fibroblast cells treated for 24 hours at 10 to 1000 nM AB8939. Further in vitro analysis showed that AB8939 produces a direct and potent, dose-dependent depolymerization effect (50% inhibition of in vitro microtubule polymerization at around 1 µM, with 100% inhibition at >5 µM). The potential of AB8939 to overcome resistance to chemotherapeutic agents in Pgp-dependent multidrug-resistant cell lines was assessed using the drug-sensitive human sarcoma cell line MES-SA (parental) and its multidrug-resistant counterparts MES-SA/MX2 and MES-SA/Dx5 in a 6-day proliferation/survival assay. AB8939 efficiently inhibited each of these cells with an IC50 ≤10 nM. By comparison, the MES-SA/MX2 and MES-SA/Dx5 cell lines were highly resistant to the chemotherapeutic agents of doxorubicin and vincristine, as compared with the effect on parental cells (IC50 <1.5 - 2.0 µM versus 20 nM, respectively). Additional tests showed that AB8939 is a very poor substrate of Pgp efflux pump, comparable with combretastatin-4, and therefore has the potential to overcome multidrug resistance in cancer patients. The anti-proliferative activity of AB8939 in various hematopoietic tumors and solid tumors was evaluated using a colorimetric cell proliferation and viability assay. AB8939 produced good anti-tumor activity after 72 hours (IC50 of ≤50 nM) in 19 hematopoietic tumor cell lines tested, including AML (3 cell lines), B cell lymphoma (8 cell lines), T cell lymphoma (6 cell lines), and multiple myeloma (2 cell lines). AB8939 also showed good anti-tumor activity after 6 days (IC50 of ≤10 nM) in several solid tumor cell lines, including breast, colon, glioblastoma, head and neck, lung, kidney, melanoma neuroblastoma, ovary, pancreas and prostate cell lines. The therapeutic potential of AB8939 in refractory/resistant AML was investigated further on doxorubicin-resistant AML cell lines (HL60 and U937), doxorubicin being a commonly used AML induction drug and Pgp substrate. AB8939 produced a strong anti-proliferative effect in both cell lines whereas both were resistant to doxorubicin, thus demonstrating AB8939's potential to overcome refractory/resistant AML. Notably, HL60 and U937 are respectively MPO-positive and MPO-negative, indicating that unlike vinca alkaloids (e.g. vincristine or vinblastine) AB8939 it is not deactivated by this myeloid enzyme. These data show that AB8939 is a prolific and highly potent (nanomolar concentrations) Pgp-independent, next-generation microtubule-destabilizer drug for cancer therapy; in particular, difficult to treat hematopoietic tumors such as relapsed/refractory AML. Disclosures Humbert: AB Science: Employment. Goubard:AB Science: Employment. Mansfield:AB Science: Employment, Patents & Royalties. Hermine:AB Science: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees. Dubreuil:AB Science: Employment, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees, Research Funding. AB8939 Study Group:AB Science: Consultancy, Employment.


Oncotarget ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 8 (44) ◽  
pp. 77254-77267 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eva Bernhart ◽  
Nicole Stuendl ◽  
Heike Kaltenegger ◽  
Christian Windpassinger ◽  
Nicholas Donohue ◽  
...  

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