RESUMO
Background: DNA-dependent protein kinase (DNA-PK) is a validated cancer therapeutic target involved in DNA damage response (DDR) and non-homologous end-joining (NHEJ) repair of DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs). Ku serves as a sensor of DSBs by binding to DNA ends and activating DNA-PK. Inhibition of DNA-PK is a common strategy to block DSB repair and improve efficacy of ionizing radiation (IR) therapy and radiomimetic drug therapies. We have previously developed Ku-DNA binding inhibitors (Ku-DBis) that block in vitro and cellular NHEJ activity, abrogate DNA-PK autophosphorylation, and potentiate cellular sensitivity to IR. Results and Conclusions: Here we report the discovery of oxindole Ku-DBis with improved cellular uptake and retained potent Ku-inhibitory activity. Variable monotherapy activity was observed in a panel of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) cell lines, with ATM-null cells being the most sensitive and showing synergy with IR. BRCA1-deficient cells were resistant to single-agent treatment and antagonistic when combined with DSB-generating therapies. In vivo studies in an NSCLC xenograft model demonstrated that the Ku-DBi treatment blocked IR-dependent DNA-PKcs autophosphorylation, modulated DDR, and reduced tumor cell proliferation. This represents the first in vivo demonstration of a Ku-targeted DNA-binding inhibitor impacting IR response and highlights the potential therapeutic utility of Ku-DBis for cancer treatment.
RESUMO
The DNA-dependent protein kinase (DNA-PK) plays a critical role in the DNA damage response (DDR) and non-homologous end joining (NHEJ) double-strand break (DSB) repair pathways. Consequently, DNA-PK is a validated therapeutic target for cancer treatment in certain DNA repair-deficient cancers and in combination with ionizing radiation (IR). We have previously reported the discovery and development of a novel class of DNA-PK inhibitors with a unique mechanism of action, blocking the Ku 70/80 heterodimer interaction with DNA. These Ku-DNA binding inhibitors (Ku-DBi's) display nanomolar activity in vitro, inhibit cellular DNA-PK, NHEJ-catalyzed DSB repair and sensitize non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) cells to DSB-inducing agents. In this study, we demonstrate that chemical inhibition of the Ku-DNA interaction potentiates the cellular effects of bleomycin and IR via p53 phosphorylation through the activation of the ATM pathway. This response is concomitant with a reduction of DNA-PK catalytic subunit (DNA-PKcs) autophosphorylation at S2056 and a time-dependent increase in H2AX phosphorylation at S139. These results are consistent with Ku-DBi's abrogating DNA-PKcs autophosphorylation to impact DSB repair and DDR signaling through a novel mechanism of action, and thus represent a promising anticancer therapeutic strategy in combination with DNA DSB-inducing agents.
RESUMO
Enediyne natural products are a class of compounds that were recognized for their potential as chemotherapeutic agents many years ago, but found to be highly cytotoxic due to their propensity for low thermal activation. Bergman cyclization of the enediyne moiety produces a diradical intermediate, and may subsequently induce DNA damage and account for the extreme cytotoxicity. While difficulties in controlling the thermal cyclization reaction have limited the clinical use of cyclic enediynes, we have previously shown that enediyne activity, and thus toxicity at physiological temperatures can be modulated by metallation of acyclic enediynes. Furthermore, the cytotoxicity of "metalloenediynes" can be potentiated by hyperthermia. In this study, we characterized a suite of novel metallated enediyne motifs that usually induced little or no cytotoxicity when two different human cancer cell lines were treated with the compounds at 37°C, but showed a significant enhancement of cytotoxicity after cells were exposed to moderate hyperthermia during drug treatment. Cultured U-1 melanoma or MDA-231 breast cancer cells were treated with various concentrations of Cu, Fe and Zn complexes of the enediyne (Z)-N,N'-bis[1-pyridyl-2-yl-meth-(E)-ylidene]octa-4-ene-2,6-diyne-1,8-diamine (PyED) and clonogenic survival was assessed to determine the effects of the drugs at 37°C and 42.5°C. Toxicity at 37°C varied for each compound, but hyperthermia potentiated the cytotoxicity of each compound in both cell lines. Cytotoxicity was concentration-, time- and temperature-dependent. Heating cells during drug treatment resulted in enhanced apoptosis, but the role of cell cycle perturbation in the response of the cells to the drugs was less clear. Lastly, we showed that hyperthermia enhanced the number of DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) induced by the compounds, and inhibited their repair after drug treatment. Thus, thermal enhancement of cytotoxicity may be due, at least in part, to the propensity of the enediyne moiety to induce DSBs, and/or a reduction in DSB repair efficiency. We propose that "tuning" of metalloenediyne toxicity through better-controlled reactivity could have potential clinical utility, since we envision that such compounds could be administered systemically as relatively non-toxic agents, but cytotoxicity could be enhanced in, and confined to a tumor volume when subjected to localized heating.
Assuntos
Antineoplásicos/química , Antineoplásicos/farmacologia , Complexos de Coordenação/química , Complexos de Coordenação/farmacologia , Enedi-Inos/química , Hipertermia Induzida , Morte Celular/efeitos dos fármacos , Linhagem Celular Tumoral , HumanosRESUMO
Enediynes are a highly cytotoxic class of compounds. However, metallation of these compounds may modulate their activation, and thus their cytotoxicity. We previously demonstrated that cytotoxicity of two different metalloenediynes, including (Z)-N,N'-bis[1-pyridyl-2-yl-meth-(E)-ylidene]octa-4-ene-2,6-diyne-1,8-diamine] (PyED), is potentiated when the compounds are administered to HeLa cells during hyperthermia treatment at concentrations that are minimally or not cytotoxic at 37°C. In this study, we further characterized the concentration, time and temperature dependence of cytotoxicity of PyED on human U-1 melanoma cells. We also investigated the potential mechanisms by which PyED cytotoxicity is enhanced during hyperthermia treatment. Cell killing with PyED was dependent on concentration, temperature during treatment and time of exposure. Potentiation of cytotoxicity was observed when cells were treated with PyED at temperatures ≥39.5°C, and enhancement of cell killing increased with temperature and with increasing time at a given temperature. All cells treated with PyED were shown to have DNA damage, but substantially more damage was observed in cells treated with PyED during heating. DNA repair was also inhibited in cells treated with the drug during hyperthermia. Thus, potentiation of PyED cytotoxicity by hyperthermia may be due to enhancement of drug-induced DNA lesions, and/or the inhibition of repair of sublethal DNA damage. While the selective thermal activation of PyED supports the potential clinical utility of metalloenediynes as cancer thermochemotherapeutic agents, therapeutic gain could be optimized by identifying compounds that produce minimal toxicity at 37°C but which become activated and show enhancement of cytotoxicity within a tumor subjected to localized hyperthermic or thermal ablative treatment, or which might act as bifunctional agents. We thus also describe the development and initial characterization of a novel cofactor complex of PyED, platinated PyED (Pt-PyED). Pt-PyED binds to DNA-like cisplatin, and much like PyED, cytotoxicity is greatly enhanced after treatment with the drug at elevated temperatures. However, in contrast to PyED, Pt-PyED is only minimally cytotoxic at 37°C, at concentrations at which cytotoxicity is enhanced by hyperthermia. Further development of cisplatin-based enediynes may result in compounds which, when activated, will possess multiple DNA binding modalities similar to cisplatin, but produce less side effects in tissues at normothermic temperatures.