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Enzyme
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Query: UMLS:C0699790 (
colon cancer
)
28,837
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Tumor necrosis factor related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL) is a promising candidate for treatment of cancer, but displays variable cytotoxicity in cell lines. The mechanisms of sensitivity and resistance have not been fully elucidated; both AKT and NF-kappaB pathways may modulate cytotoxic responses. We have shown that the
Hsp90
inhibitor 17-AAG enhances the cytotoxicity of oxaliplatin in
colon cancer
cell lines through inhibition of NF-kappaB. We analyzed the effects of TRAIL and 17-AAG in combination in a series of nine
colon cancer
cell lines and characterized activation of the pathways to apoptosis. IC(50) values for a 72 h exposure to TRAIL ranged from 30 to 4000 ng/ml. Cytotoxicity assays demonstrated additivity or synergism of the TRAIL/17-AAG combination in all cell lines, with combination indices at IC(50) ranging from 0.53 to 1. The sensitizing effect of 17-AAG was greater in the TRAIL-resistant cell lines. In TRAIL-resistant cell lines, the combination of 17-AAG and TRAIL resulted in activation of both extrinsic and intrinsic apoptotic pathways, though with quantitative differences between HT29 and RKO cells: differential effects of 17-AAG on AKT and NF-kappaB characterized these cell lines. In both cell lines, the combination also led to down-regulation of X-linked inhibitor of apoptosis protein (XIAP) and enhanced activation of caspase-3. We conclude that either AKT or NF-kappaB may promote resistance to TRAIL in
colon cancer
cells, and that the ability of 17-AAG to target multiple putative determinants of TRAIL sensitivity warrants their further investigation in combination.
...
PMID:17-Allylamino-17-demethoxygeldanamycin overcomes TRAIL resistance in colon cancer cell lines. 1599 48
To activate prodrugs for cancer treatment, an anti-TAG-72 antibody (HuCC49DeltaCH2) was used for delivery of an activation enzyme (beta-galactosidase) to specifically activate a geldanamycin prodrug (17-AG-C2-Gal) against
colon cancer
. The geldanamycin prodrug 17-AG-C2-Gal was synthesized by coupling a galactose-amine derivative with geldanamycin at the C-17 position. Molecular docking with two different programs (Affinity and Autodock) showed that the prodrug (17-AG-C2-Gal) was unable to bind to
Hsp90
; however, the product (17-AG-C2), enzymatically cleaved by beta-galactosidase conjugate, bound to
Hsp90
in a similar way as geldanamycin and 17-AG. The computational docking results were further confirmed in experimental testing by the tetrazolium [3-(4,5-dimethythiazol-2-yl)]-5-(3-carboxymethoxyphenyl)-2-(4-sulfophenyl)-2H-tetrazolium assay and mass spectrometry. HuCC49DeltaCH2 was chemically conjugated to beta-galactosidase. The antibody-enzyme conjugate was able to target tumor antigen TAG-72 with the well-preserved enzymatic activity to activate 17-AG-C2-Gal prodrug. The released active drug 17-AG-C2 was demonstrated to induce up to 70% AKT degradation and enhance anticancer activity by more than 25-fold compared to the prodrug.
...
PMID:Enzyme specific activation of benzoquinone ansamycin prodrugs using HuCC49DeltaCH2-beta-galactosidase conjugates. 1703 35
A series of benzo-macrolactones of varying ring size and conformation has been prepared by chemical synthesis and evaluated by structural and biological techniques. Thus, 12- to 16-membered lactones were obtained by concise routes, involving ring-closing metathesis as a key step. In enzyme assays, the 13-, 15-, and 16-membered analogs are good inhibitors, suggesting that they can adopt the required conformation to fit in the ATP-binding site. This was confirmed by cocrystallization of 13-, 14-, and 15-membered lactones with the N-terminal domain of yeast
Hsp90
, showing that they bind similarly to the "natural" 14-membered radicicol. The most active compounds in the ATPase assays also showed the greatest growth-inhibitory potency in HCT116 human
colon cancer
cells and the established molecular signature of
Hsp90
inhibition, i.e., depletion of client proteins with upregulation of Hsp70.
...
PMID:Inhibition of Hsp90 with synthetic macrolactones: synthesis and structural and biological evaluation of ring and conformational analogs of radicicol. 1711 2
In a series of colorectal cancer cell lines, both necrosis and apoptosis were induced upon exposure to oxaliplatin, and enhanced by co-administration of the
Hsp90
inhibitor 17-AAG. We analyzed the effects of these interventions on the cell cycle, and found that oxaliplatin treatment caused G1 and G2 arrest in HCT116 cells, and S-phase accumulation in two p53-deficient cell lines (HT29 and DLD1). Addition of 17-AAG enhanced cell cycle effects of oxaliplatin in HCT116, and induced G1 arrest and decrease in S-phase population in the other cell lines. Analysis of cell cycle proteins revealed that the major difference between the cell lines was that in HCT116, 17-AAG resulted in profound inhibition of expression and phosphorylation of late G1 proteins cyclin E and cdk2, with no effect on p21/WAF1 induction. Consistent with these, an HCT116 p53(-/-) line, lacking p21, showed resistance to oxaliplatin, failure to enter apoptosis, and an accumulation of cells in S-phase. Introduction of p21 in these cells caused reversal of that phenotype, including restoration of the G1 block and re-sensitization to oxaliplatin. Inhibition of G1/S progression using cdk2 inhibitor also enhanced oxaliplatin cytotoxicity. We conclude that in
colon cancer
cells with impaired p53 function, interventions directed to cycle arrest in G1 may potentiate oxaliplatin activity.
...
PMID:Inhibition of G1/S transition potentiates oxaliplatin-induced cell death in colon cancer cell lines. 1734 30
Inhibitors of the
Hsp90
molecular chaperone are showing considerable promise as potential chemotherapeutic agents for cancer. Here, we describe the structure-based design, synthesis, structure-activity relationships and pharmacokinetics of potent small-molecule inhibitors of
Hsp90
based on the 4,5-diarylisoxazole scaffold. Analogues from this series have high affinity for
Hsp90
, as measured in a fluorescence polarization (FP) competitive binding assay, and are active in cancer cell lines where they inhibit proliferation and exhibit a characteristic profile of depletion of oncogenic proteins and concomitant elevation of Hsp72. Compound 40f (VER-52296/NVP-AUY922) is potent in the
Hsp90
FP binding assay (IC50 = 21 nM) and inhibits proliferation of various human cancer cell lines in vitro, with GI50 averaging 9 nM. Compound 40f is retained in tumors in vivo when administered i.p., as evaluated by cassette dosing in tumor-bearing mice. In a human
colon cancer
xenograft model, 40f inhibits tumor growth by approximately 50%.
...
PMID:4,5-diarylisoxazole Hsp90 chaperone inhibitors: potential therapeutic agents for the treatment of cancer. 1802 Apr 35
Recently, we reported that the natural product derrubone exhibits
Hsp90
inhibitory activity. Due to its unique architectural scaffold and proposed rapid assembly, the synthesis of this natural product was pursued with the aim of identifying structure--activity relationships. Synthesis of the natural product was accomplished in eight highly convergent steps, which led to a facile method for the construction of related compounds. Biological evaluation of derrubone and its analogues identified several compounds that exhibit low micromolar inhibitory activity against breast and
colon cancer
cell lines.
...
PMID:Synthesis and evaluation of derrubone and select analogues. 1815 4
Hsp90
is an evolutionarily conserved and ubiquitously expressed molecular chaperone that mainly modulates, along with a group of co-chaperones, the general platform of protein folding and prevents the nonspecific aggregation of misfolded or unfolded proteins. In the voluminous
Hsp90
clientele, a large variety of important regulatory proteins can be identified, including many whose deregulation may lead to cancer initiation and progression, such as the oncogenic clients pp60(v-src), Bcr-Abl, mutated p53, ErbB2 (Her-2), Akt, Flt3, HIF-1alpha and B-Raf. Therefore, inhibition of
Hsp90
function offers the prospect of simultaneously disrupting multiple signaling pathways directly implicated in the development of malignant phenotypes. During the last few years, there has been a major focus on the development of
Hsp90
specific inhibitors. This started with the discovery that certain natural products could specifically disrupt
Hsp90
chaperone activities. The benzoquinone ansamycin antibiotic geldanamycin and its less toxic derivative 17-AAG have been shown to possess strong anti-proliferative and apoptotic activity in cancer cells, whereas 17-AAG has demonstrated potent anti-tumor activity in several human xenograft models, including breast, prostate and
colon cancer
. In an effort to overcome difficulties with drug toxicity and solubility, a number of novel bioengineered 17-AAG analogues, such as 17-DMAG and IPI-504, and small-molecule inhibitors, including purine and pyrazole derivatives, have emerged from rational drug design followed by high-throughput screening approaches. 17-AAG was the leader inhibitor to enter and successfully complete phase I clinical trials, thus demonstrating that
Hsp90
constitutes a valid drug target for cancer therapy. This review includes information on the current model of ternary interactions between
Hsp90
, client proteins and a vast array of co-chaperones followed by a list of characteristic inhibitors and ongoing clinical trials reported thus far.
...
PMID:Drug-mediated targeted disruption of multiple protein activities through functional inhibition of the Hsp90 chaperone complex. 1822 Jul 46
The G(2)/M cell cycle checkpoint is regulated by a multitude of signaling pathways after genotoxic stress. Herein, we report that treatment with the 90-kDa heat shock protein (
Hsp90
) molecular chaperone inhibitor 17-allylamino-17-demethoxygeldanamycin (17AAG) selectively abrogates the G(2)/M checkpoint induced by 7-ethyl-10-hydroxycamptothecin (SN-38), an active metabolite of irinotecan, in p53-null compared with p53-intact HCT116
colon cancer
cells. The basis for this selectivity can be explained in part by the lack of p21 induction in p53-null cells. In accord with published results, we could show that treatment with 17AAG resulted in depletion of Chk1, a known
Hsp90
client protein. In addition, we observed a time- and dose-dependent decrease in Wee1 kinase level, a negative regulator of mitosis, after 17AAG treatment in gastrointestinal cancer cells. Depletion of Wee1 protein preceded mitotic entry induced by 17AAG, and this decrease could be partially rescued by cotreatment with a proteasome inhibitor. Coimmunoprecipitation experiments showed that
Hsp90
and Wee1 interacted in whole cells, and 17AAG treatment decreased the degradative half-life of Wee1, indicating that Wee1 is another
Hsp90
client in mammalian cells. Knockdown of Chk1 and Wee1 by short interfering RNA each resulted in abrogation of the G(2)/M checkpoint induced by SN-38. The combination of SN-38 and 17AAG was shown to be synergistic in p53-null but not in parental HCT116 cells by median effect/combination index analysis. Taken together, 17AAG specifically inhibits the G(2)/M checkpoint in p53-defective cells by down-regulation of two critical checkpoint kinases, Chk1 and Wee1.
...
PMID:90-kDa heat shock protein inhibition abrogates the topoisomerase I poison-induced G2/M checkpoint in p53-null tumor cells by depleting Chk1 and Wee1. 1882 Jan 27
Cyclin E is the Cdk2-regulatory subunit required for the initiation of DNA replication at the G1/S transition. It accumulates in late G1 phase and gets rapidly degraded by the ubiquitin/proteasome pathway during S phase. The degradation of cyclin E is a consequence of its phosphorylation and subsequent isomerization by the peptidyl-prolyl isomerase Pin1. We show that in the
colon cancer
cells HT-29 the inhibition of the chaperone function of
Hsp90
by geldanamycin (GA) enhances the ubiquitinylation of cyclin E and triggers active degradation via the proteasome pathway. As
Hsp90
forms multiprotein complexes with and regulates the function and cell contents of numerous signaling proteins, this observation suggests a direct interaction between
Hsp90
and cyclin E. However, experiments using cell lysate fractionation did not reveal the presence of complexes containing both
Hsp90
and cyclin E. Coupled transcription/translation experiments also failed to detect the formation of complexes between newly synthesized cyclin E and
Hsp90
. We conclude that
Hsp90
can regulate the degradation of cellular proteins without binding to them, by an indirect mechanism. This conclusion postulates a new category of proteins that are affected by the inactivation of
Hsp90
. Our observations do not support the possible involvement of a PPIase in this indirect mechanism. Besides, we did not observe active geldanamycin-dependent degradation of cyclin E in the prostate cancer-derived cell line DU-145, indicating that the
Hsp90
-dependent stabilization of cyclin E requires specific regulatory mechanism which may be lost in certain types of cancer cells.
...
PMID:Indirect participation of Hsp90 in the regulation of the cyclin E turnover. 1897 5
Hsp90
is a molecular chaperone involved in the folding and proteolytic turnover of many regulatory proteins associated with it. Some of the
Hsp90
client proteins are known to be involved in tumorigenesis. An
Hsp90
-specific inhibitor, geldanamycin, is shown to bind to the ATP binding site of the chaperone to induce degradation of many client proteins, and results in antitumor activities. However, the mechanism of geldanamycin-induced client protein degradation is not fully understood. A large-scale immunoaffinity purification with anti-
Hsp90
antibodies identified many
Hsp90
client proteins from
colon cancer
cell line, HCT-116. One of the identified proteins, PCNA, was confirmed to be associated with
Hsp90
in two additional cancer cell lines. After geldanamycin treatment, both PCNA and
Hsp90
were shown to be degraded. More interestingly, this study demonstrated that in two different cancer cell lines, the degradation occurred in the isolated
Hsp90
complex in vitro. This result indicated that the components responsible for the PCNA degradation are also associated with
Hsp90
. This finding provided a new mechanism for the
Hsp90
-mediated protein degradation induced by
Hsp90
-specific inhibitors.
...
PMID:Geldanamycin-induced PCNA degradation in isolated Hsp90 complex from cancer cells. 2039 3
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