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1.
iScience ; 23(9): 101517, 2020 Sep 25.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32927263

RÉSUMÉ

Structural mutants of p53 induce global p53 protein destabilization and misfolding, followed by p53 protein aggregation. First evidence indicates that p53 can be part of protein condensates and that p53 aggregation potentially transitions through a condensate-like state. We show condensate-like states of fluorescently labeled structural mutant p53 in the nucleus of living cancer cells. We furthermore identified small molecule compounds that interact with the p53 protein and lead to dissolution of p53 structural mutant condensates. The same compounds lead to condensation of a fluorescently tagged p53 DNA-binding mutant, indicating that the identified compounds differentially alter p53 condensation behavior depending on the type of p53 mutation. In contrast to p53 aggregation inhibitors, these compounds are active on p53 condensates and do not lead to mutant p53 reactivation. Taken together our study provides evidence for structural mutant p53 condensation in living cells and tools to modulate this process.

2.
J Hepatol ; 72(4): 725-735, 2020 04.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31726117

RÉSUMÉ

BACKGROUND & AIM: Under the regulation of various oncogenic pathways, cancer cells undergo adaptive metabolic programming to maintain specific metabolic states that support their uncontrolled proliferation. As it has been difficult to directly and effectively inhibit oncogenic signaling cascades with pharmaceutical compounds, focusing on the downstream metabolic pathways that enable indefinite growth may provide therapeutic opportunities. Thus, we sought to characterize metabolic changes in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) development and identify metabolic targets required for tumorigenesis. METHODS: We compared gene expression profiles of Morris Hepatoma (MH3924a) and DEN (diethylnitrosamine)-induced HCC models to those of liver tissues from normal and rapidly regenerating liver models, and performed gain- and loss-of-function studies of the identified gene targets for their roles in cancer cell proliferation in vitro and in vivo. RESULTS: The proline biosynthetic enzyme PYCR1 (pyrroline-5-carboxylate reductase 1) was identified as one of the most upregulated genes in the HCC models. Knockdown of PYCR1 potently reduced cell proliferation of multiple HCC cell lines in vitro and tumor growth in vivo. Conversely, overexpression of PYCR1 enhanced the proliferation of the HCC cell lines. Importantly, PYCR1 expression was not elevated in the regenerating liver, and KD or overexpression of PYCR1 had no effect on proliferation of non-cancerous cells. Besides PYCR1, we found that additional proline biosynthetic enzymes, such as ALDH18A1, were upregulated in HCC models and also regulated HCC cell proliferation. Clinical data demonstrated that PYCR1 expression was increased in HCC, correlated with tumor grade, and was an independent predictor of clinical outcome. CONCLUSION: Enhanced expression of proline biosynthetic enzymes promotes HCC cell proliferation. Inhibition of PYCR1 or ALDH18A1 may be a novel therapeutic strategy to target HCC. LAY SUMMARY: Even with the recently approved immunotherapies against liver cancer, currently available medications show limited clinical benefits or efficacy in the majority of patients. As such, it remains a top priority to discover new targets for effective liver cancer treatment. Here, we identify a critical role for the proline biosynthetic pathway in liver cancer development, and demonstrate that targeting key proteins in the pathway, namely PYCR1 and ALDH18A1, may be a novel therapeutic strategy for liver cancer.


Sujet(s)
Carcinogenèse/métabolisme , Carcinome hépatocellulaire/métabolisme , Tumeurs expérimentales du foie/métabolisme , Tumeurs du foie/métabolisme , Proline/biosynthèse , Transduction du signal/génétique , Aldehyde dehydrogenase/déficit , Aldehyde dehydrogenase/génétique , Animaux , Carcinogenèse/génétique , Carcinome hépatocellulaire/induit chimiquement , Carcinome hépatocellulaire/anatomopathologie , Prolifération cellulaire/génétique , N-Éthyl-N-nitroso-éthanamine/effets indésirables , Régulation de l'expression des gènes tumoraux , Techniques de knock-down de gènes , Cellules HEK293 , Cellules HaCaT , Cellules HepG2 , Humains , Tumeurs du foie/induit chimiquement , Tumeurs du foie/anatomopathologie , Tumeurs expérimentales du foie/génétique , Tumeurs expérimentales du foie/anatomopathologie , Mâle , Souris , Souris de lignée BALB C , Souris de lignée C57BL , Souris nude , Souris SCID , Pyrroline carboxylate reductases/déficit , Pyrroline carboxylate reductases/génétique , Rats , Transcriptome , Transfection , Charge tumorale/génétique , Tests d'activité antitumorale sur modèle de xénogreffe ,
3.
J Hematol Oncol ; 12(1): 66, 2019 06 28.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31253180

RÉSUMÉ

INTRODUCTION: The chromosomal rearrangements of the mixed-lineage leukemia gene MLL (KMT2A) have been extensively characterized as a potent oncogenic driver in leukemia. For its oncogenic function, most MLL-fusion proteins exploit the multienzyme super elongation complex leading to elevated expression of MLL target genes. High expression of MLL target genes overwrites the normal hematopoietic differentiation program, resulting in undifferentiated blasts characterized by the capacity to self-renew. Although extensive resources devoted to increased understanding of therapeutic targets to overcome de-differentiation in ALL/AML, the inter-dependencies of targets are still not well described. The majority of inhibitors potentially interfering with MLL-fusion protein driven transformation have been characterized in individual studies, which so far hindered their direct cross-comparison. METHODS: In our study, we characterized head-to-head clinical stage inhibitors for BET, DHODH, DOT1L as well as two novel inhibitors for CDK9 and the Menin-MLL interaction with a focus on differentiation induction. We profiled those inhibitors for global gene expression effects in a large cell line panel and examined cellular responses such as inhibition of proliferation, apoptosis induction, cell cycle arrest, surface marker expression, morphological phenotype changes, and phagocytosis as functional differentiation readout. We also verified the combination potential of those inhibitors on proliferation and differentiation level. RESULTS: Our analysis revealed significant differences in differentiation induction and in modulating MLL-fusion target gene expression. We observed Menin-MLL and DOT1L inhibitors act very specifically on MLL-fused leukemia cell lines, whereas inhibitors of BET, DHODH and P-TEFb have strong effects beyond MLL-fusions. Significant differentiation effects were detected for Menin-MLL, DOT1L, and DHODH inhibitors, whereas BET and CDK9 inhibitors primarily induced apoptosis in AML/ALL cancer models. For the first time, we explored combination potential of the abovementioned inhibitors with regards to overcoming the differentiation blockage. CONCLUSION: Our findings show substantial diversity in the molecular activities of those inhibitors and provide valuable insights into the further developmental potential as single agents or in combinations in MLL-fused leukemia.


Sujet(s)
Antinéoplasiques/composition chimique , Antinéoplasiques/pharmacologie , Histone-lysine N-methyltransferase/génétique , Leucémies/traitement médicamenteux , Protéine de la leucémie myéloïde-lymphoïde/génétique , Lignée cellulaire tumorale , Prolifération cellulaire/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Antienzymes/composition chimique , Antienzymes/pharmacologie , Régulation de l'expression des gènes dans la leucémie/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Réarrangement des gènes/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Histone-lysine N-methyltransferase/métabolisme , Humains , Leucémies/génétique , Leucémies/métabolisme , Protéine de la leucémie myéloïde-lymphoïde/métabolisme , Protéines de fusion oncogènes/génétique , Protéines de fusion oncogènes/métabolisme , Cartes d'interactions protéiques/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Protéines proto-oncogènes/métabolisme
4.
Cell Death Dis ; 8(3): e2709, 2017 03 30.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28358364

RÉSUMÉ

Owing to lagging or insufficient neo-angiogenesis, hypoxia is a feature of most solid tumors. Hypoxic tumor regions contribute to resistance against antiproliferative chemotherapeutics, radiotherapy and immunotherapy. Targeting cells in hypoxic tumor areas is therefore an important strategy for cancer treatment. Most approaches for targeting hypoxic cells focus on the inhibition of hypoxia adaption pathways but only a limited number of compounds with the potential to specifically target hypoxic tumor regions have been identified. By using tumor spheroids in hypoxic conditions as screening system, we identified a set of compounds, including the phenothiazine antipsychotic Fluphenazine, as hits with novel mode of action. Fluphenazine functionally inhibits acid sphingomyelinase and causes cellular sphingomyelin accumulation, which induces cancer cell death specifically in hypoxic tumor spheroids. Moreover, we found that functional inhibition of acid sphingomyelinase leads to overactivation of hypoxia stress-response pathways and that hypoxia-specific cell death is mediated by the stress-responsive transcription factor ATF4. Taken together, the here presented data suggest a novel, yet unexplored mechanism in which induction of sphingolipid stress leads to the overactivation of hypoxia stress-response pathways and thereby promotes their pro-apoptotic tumor-suppressor functions to specifically kill cells in hypoxic tumor areas.


Sujet(s)
Tumeurs du côlon/enzymologie , Fluphénazine/pharmacologie , Protéines tumorales/antagonistes et inhibiteurs , Sphingomyeline phosphodiesterase/antagonistes et inhibiteurs , Facteur de transcription ATF-4/génétique , Facteur de transcription ATF-4/métabolisme , Mort cellulaire/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Hypoxie cellulaire/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Hypoxie cellulaire/génétique , Lignée cellulaire tumorale , Tumeurs du côlon/génétique , Tumeurs du côlon/anatomopathologie , Humains , Protéines tumorales/génétique , Protéines tumorales/métabolisme , Sphingomyeline phosphodiesterase/génétique
5.
Handb Exp Pharmacol ; 232: 25-41, 2016.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26330261

RÉSUMÉ

Targeted therapies in personalized medicine require the knowledge about the molecular changes within the patient that cause the disease. With the beginning of the new century, a plethora of new technologies became available to detect these changes and use this information as starting point for drug development. Next-generation genome sequencing and sophisticated genome-wide functional genomics' methods have led to a significant increase in the identification of novel drug target candidates and understanding of the relevance of these genomic and molecular changes for the diseases. As functional genomic tool for target identification, high-throughput gene silencing through RNA interference screening has become the established method. RNAi is discussed with its advantages and challenges in this chapter. Furthermore the potential of CRISPR/Cas9, a gene-editing method that has recently been adapted for use as functional screening tool, will be briefly reviewed.


Sujet(s)
Découverte de médicament , Génomique , Séquençage nucléotidique à haut débit , Interférence par ARN
6.
Cell Res ; 22(8): 1227-45, 2012 Aug.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22613949

RÉSUMÉ

Oncogenic mutations in RAS genes are very common in human cancer, resulting in cells with well-characterized selective advantages, but also less well-understood vulnerabilities. We have carried out a large-scale loss-of-function screen to identify genes that are required by KRAS-transformed colon cancer cells, but not by derivatives lacking this oncogene. Top-scoring genes were then tested in a larger panel of KRAS mutant and wild-type cancer cells. Cancer cells expressing oncogenic KRAS were found to be highly dependent on the transcription factor GATA2 and the DNA replication initiation regulator CDC6. Extending this analysis using a collection of drugs with known targets, we found that cancer cells with mutant KRAS showed selective addiction to proteasome function, as well as synthetic lethality with topoisomerase inhibition. Combination targeting of these functions caused improved killing of KRAS mutant cells relative to wild-type cells. These observations suggest novel targets and new ways of combining existing therapies for optimal effect in RAS mutant cancers, which are traditionally seen as being highly refractory to therapy.


Sujet(s)
Antinéoplasiques/pharmacologie , Tumeurs du côlon/génétique , Protéines proto-oncogènes/métabolisme , Protéines G ras/métabolisme , Allèles , Apoptose , Acides boroniques/pharmacologie , Bortézomib , Protéines du cycle cellulaire/génétique , Protéines du cycle cellulaire/métabolisme , Lignée cellulaire tumorale , Survie cellulaire , Transformation cellulaire néoplasique/génétique , Transformation cellulaire néoplasique/métabolisme , Tumeurs du côlon/métabolisme , Tumeurs du côlon/anatomopathologie , ADN topoisomérases de type I/métabolisme , Désoxycytidine/analogues et dérivés , Désoxycytidine/pharmacologie , Facteur de transcription GATA-2/génétique , Facteur de transcription GATA-2/métabolisme , Régulation de l'expression des gènes tumoraux , Techniques de knock-down de gènes , Humains , Mutation , Protéines nucléaires/génétique , Protéines nucléaires/métabolisme , Proteasome endopeptidase complex/génétique , Proteasome endopeptidase complex/métabolisme , Inhibiteurs du protéasome/pharmacologie , Protéines proto-oncogènes/génétique , Protéines proto-oncogènes p21(ras) , Pyrazines/pharmacologie , Interférence par ARN , Petit ARN interférent/génétique , Petit ARN interférent/métabolisme , Inhibiteurs de la topoisomérase-I/pharmacologie , Topotécane/pharmacologie , Activation de la transcription , Protéines G ras/génétique ,
7.
Cell ; 149(3): 642-55, 2012 Apr 27.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22541434

RÉSUMÉ

Non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is the most frequent cause of cancer deaths worldwide; nearly half contain mutations in the receptor tyrosine kinase/RAS pathway. Here we show that RAS-pathway mutant NSCLC cells depend on the transcription factor GATA2. Loss of GATA2 reduced the viability of NSCLC cells with RAS-pathway mutations, whereas wild-type cells were unaffected. Integrated gene expression and genome occupancy analyses revealed GATA2 regulation of the proteasome, and IL-1-signaling, and Rho-signaling pathways. These pathways were functionally significant, as reactivation rescued viability after GATA2 depletion. In a Kras-driven NSCLC mouse model, Gata2 loss dramatically reduced tumor development. Furthermore, Gata2 deletion in established Kras mutant tumors induced striking regression. Although GATA2 itself is likely undruggable, combined suppression of GATA2-regulated pathways with clinically approved inhibitors caused marked tumor clearance. Discovery of the nononcogene addiction of KRAS mutant lung cancers to GATA2 presents a network of druggable pathways for therapeutic exploitation.


Sujet(s)
Carcinome pulmonaire non à petites cellules/métabolisme , Facteur de transcription GATA-2/métabolisme , Réseaux de régulation génique , Tumeurs du poumon/métabolisme , Protéines proto-oncogènes/métabolisme , Protéines G ras/métabolisme , Animaux , Carcinome pulmonaire non à petites cellules/anatomopathologie , Lignée cellulaire tumorale , Facteur de transcription GATA-2/génétique , Régulation de l'expression des gènes tumoraux , Techniques de knock-down de gènes , Humains , Tumeurs du poumon/anatomopathologie , Souris , Protéines proto-oncogènes/génétique , Protéines proto-oncogènes p21(ras)/génétique , Protéines proto-oncogènes p21(ras)/métabolisme , Transduction du signal , Protéines G ras/génétique
8.
Genes Dev ; 19(22): 2668-81, 2005 Nov 15.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16260493

RÉSUMÉ

TGF-beta-activated kinase 1 (TAK1), a member of the MAPKKK family, is thought to be a key modulator of the inducible transcription factors NF-kappaB and AP-1 and, therefore, plays a crucial role in regulating the genes that mediate inflammation. Although in vitro biochemical studies have revealed the existence of a TAK1 complex, which includes TAK1 and the adapter proteins TAB1 and TAB2, it remains unclear which members of this complex are essential for signaling. To analyze the function of TAK1 in vivo, we have deleted the Tak1 gene in mice, with the resulting phenotype being early embryonic lethality. Using embryonic fibroblasts lacking TAK1, TAB1, or TAB2, we have found that TNFR1, IL-1R, TLR3, and TLR4-mediated NF-kappaB and AP-1 activation are severely impaired in Tak1(m/m) cells, but they are normal in Tab1(-/-) and Tab2(-/-) cells. In addition, Tak1(m/m) cells are highly sensitive to TNF-induced apoptosis. TAK1 mediates IKK activation in TNF-alpha and IL-1 signaling pathways, where it functions downstream of RIP1-TRAF2 and MyD88-IRAK1-TRAF6, respectively. However, TAK1 is not required for NF-kappaB activation through the alternative pathway following LT-beta signaling. In the TGF-beta signaling pathway, TAK1 deletion leads to impaired NF-kappaB and c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) activation without impacting Smad2 activation or TGF-beta-induced gene expression. Therefore, our studies suggests that TAK1 acts as an upstream activating kinase for IKKbeta and JNK, but not IKKalpha, revealing an unexpectedly specific role of TAK1 in inflammatory signaling pathways.


Sujet(s)
Protéines et peptides de signalisation intracellulaire/physiologie , MAP Kinase Kinase Kinases/physiologie , Protéines adaptatrices de la transduction du signal/physiologie , Animaux , Antigènes de différenciation/physiologie , Apoptose/physiologie , Cellules COS , Lignée cellulaire , Lignée de cellules transformées , Chlorocebus aethiops , Protéines d'activation de la GTPase/physiologie , Humains , I-kappa B Kinase/physiologie , Interleukine-1/métabolisme , Interleukin-1 Receptor-Associated Kinases , JNK Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinases/métabolisme , MAP Kinase Kinase Kinases/génétique , Souris , Mutation , Facteur de différenciation myéloïde-88 , Facteur de transcription NF-kappa B/métabolisme , Protein kinases/physiologie , Récepteurs immunologiques/physiologie , Transduction du signal/physiologie , Facteur-2 associé aux récepteurs de TNF/physiologie , Facteur-6 associé aux récepteurs de TNF/physiologie , Récepteurs de type Toll/physiologie , Facteur de transcription AP-1/physiologie , Facteur de nécrose tumorale alpha/physiologie
9.
EMBO Rep ; 6(10): 979-84, 2005 Oct.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16170305

RÉSUMÉ

Innate immunity in vertebrates and invertebrates is of central importance as a biological programme for host defence against pathogenic challenges. To find novel components of the Drosophila immune deficiency (IMD) pathway in cultured haemocyte-like cells, we screened an RNA interference library for modifiers of a pathway-specific reporter. Selected modifiers were further characterized using an independent reporter assay and placed into the pathway in relation to known pathway components. Interestingly, the screen identified the Inhibitor of Apoptosis Protein 2 (IAP 2) as being required for IMD signalling. Whereas loss of DIAP 1, the other member of the IAP protein family in Drosophila, leads to apoptosis, we show that IAP 2 is dispensable for cell viability in haemocyte-like cells. Cell-based epistasis experiments show that IAP 2 acts at the level of Tak 1 (transforming growth factor-beta-activated kinase 1). Our results indicate that IAP gene family members may have acquired other functions, such as the regulation of the tumour necrosis factor-like IMD pathway during innate immune responses.


Sujet(s)
Apoptose/immunologie , Protéines de Drosophila/immunologie , Drosophila/immunologie , Immunité innée/physiologie , Protéines IAP/immunologie , Transduction du signal/physiologie , Animaux , Cellules cultivées , Protéines de Drosophila/génétique , Cytométrie en flux , Banque de gènes , Protéines IAP/génétique , Réaction de polymérisation en chaîne , Interférence par ARN , Récepteurs de surface cellulaire , Facteur de croissance transformant bêta/physiologie
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