scholarly journals Tryprostatin A, a specific and novel inhibitor of microtubule assembly

1998 ◽  
Vol 333 (3) ◽  
pp. 543-548 ◽  
Author(s):  
Takeo USUI ◽  
Masuo KONDOH ◽  
Cheng-Bin CUI ◽  
Tadanori MAYUMI ◽  
Hiroyuki OSADA

We have investigated the cell cycle inhibition mechanism and primary target of tryprostatin A (TPS-A) purified from Aspergillus fumigatus. TPS-A inhibited cell cycle progression of asynchronously cultured 3Y1 cells in the M phase in a dose- and time-dependent manner. In contrast, TPS-B (the demethoxy analogue of TPS-A) showed cell-cycle non-specific inhibition on cell growth even though it inhibited cell growth at lower concentrations than TPS-A. TPS-A treatment induced the reversible disruption of the cytoplasmic microtubules of 3Y1 cells as observed by indirect immunofluorescence microscopy in the range of concentrations that specifically inhibited M-phase progression. TPS-A inhibited the assembly in vitro of microtubules purified from bovine brains (40% inhibition at 250 µM); however, there was little or no effect on the self-assembly of purified tubulin when polymerization was induced by glutamate even at 250 µM TPS-A. TPS-A did not inhibit assembly promoted by taxol or by digestion of the C-terminal domain of tubulin. However, TPS-A blocked the tubulin assembly induced by inducers interacting with the C-terminal domain, microtubule-associated protein 2 (MAP2), tau and poly-(l-lysine). These results indicate that TPS-A is a novel inhibitor of MAP-dependent microtubule assembly and, through the disruption of the microtubule spindle, specifically inhibits cell cycle progression at the M phase.

1999 ◽  
Vol 340 (2) ◽  
pp. 411-416 ◽  
Author(s):  
Masuo KONDOH ◽  
Takeo USUI ◽  
Takaaki NISHIKIORI ◽  
Tadanori MAYUMI ◽  
Hiroyuki OSADA

We reported previously that pironetin and its derivatives were potent inhibitors of cell cycle progression at the M-phase and showed antitumour activity against a murine tumour cell line, P388 leukaemia, transplanted in mice. In this paper, we investigated the mechanism of action of pironetins in antitumour activity and cell cycle arrest at the M-phase. As reported previously for murine leukaemia P388 cells, pironetin showed antitumour activity in a dose-dependent manner in the human leukaemia cell line HL-60. Since DNA fragmentation was observed in both P388 and HL-60 cells, the antitumour activity of pironetin is thought to be due to the induction of apoptosis. Pironetin also induced the rapid phosphorylation of Bcl-2 before formation of the DNA ladder in HL-60 cells, as seen with several tubulin binders. These results suggest that the antitumour activity of pironetin is due to apoptosis caused by the phosphorylation of Bcl-2, and that pironetin targets the microtubules. Pironetin and demethylpironetin exhibited reversible disruption of the cellular microtubule network in normal rat fibroblast 3Y1 cells. However, epoxypironetin, which contains epoxide instead of the double bond of pironetin, showed only weak activity. Since the concentrations that inhibit cell cycle progression at the M-phase were the same as those for disruption of the microtubule network, it was suggested that the mitotic arrest induced by pironetin was the result of the loss of the mitotic spindle. These compounds also inhibited the microtubule-associated protein-induced and glutamate-induced tubulin assembly in vitro. Pironetin inhibited the binding of [3H]vinblastine, but not that of [3H]colchicine, to tubulin, and the Kd values revealed that the affinity of pironetin for tubulin is stronger than that of vinblastine. These results suggest that pironetins are novel antitumour agents which inhibit microtubule assembly.


2005 ◽  
Vol 289 (4) ◽  
pp. C826-C835 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sharon Barone ◽  
Tomohisa Okaya ◽  
Steve Rudich ◽  
Snezana Petrovic ◽  
Kathy Tenrani ◽  
...  

Ischemia-reperfusion injury (IRI) in liver and other organs is manifested as an injury phase followed by recovery and resolution. Control of cell growth and proliferation is essential for recovery from the injury. We examined the expression of three related regulators of cell cycle progression in liver IRI: spermidine/spermine N-acetyltransferase (SSAT), p21 (a cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor), and stathmin. Mice were subjected to hepatic IRI, and liver tissues were harvested at timed intervals. The expression of SSAT, the rate-limiting enzyme in the polyamine catabolic pathway, had increased fivefold 6 h after IRI and correlated with increased putrescine levels in the liver, consistent with increased SSAT enzymatic activity in IRI. The expression of p21, which is transactivated by p53, was undetectable in sham-operated animals but was heavily induced at 12 and 24 h of reperfusion and declined to undetectable baseline levels at 72 h of reperfusion. The interaction of the polyamine pathway with the p53-p21 pathway was shown in vitro, where activation of SSAT with polyamine analog or the addition of putrescine to cultured hepatocytes induced the expression of p53 and p21 and decreased cell viability. The expression of stathmin, which is under negative transcriptional regulation by p21 and controls cell proliferation and progression through mitosis, remained undetectable at 6, 12, and 24 h of reperfusion and was progressively and heavily induced at 48 and 72 h of reperfusion. Double-immunofluorescence labeling with antibodies against stathmin and PCNA, a marker of cell proliferation, demonstrated colocalization of stathmin and PCNA at 48 and 72 h of reperfusion in hepatocytes, indicating the initiation of cell proliferation. The distinct and sequential upregulation of SSAT, p21, and stathmin, along with biochemical activation of the polyamine catabolic pathway in IRI in vivo and the demonstration of p53-p21 upregulation by SSAT and putrescine in vitro, points to the important role of regulators of cell growth and cell cycle progression in the pathophysiology and/or recovery in liver IRI. The data further suggest that SSAT may play a role in the initiation of injury, whereas p21 and stathmin may be involved in the resolution and recovery after liver IRI.


2002 ◽  
Vol 22 (18) ◽  
pp. 6509-6520 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tetsuo Maruyama ◽  
Andrea Farina ◽  
Anup Dey ◽  
JaeHun Cheong ◽  
Vladimir P. Bermudez ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Brd4 belongs to the BET family of nuclear proteins that carry two bromodomains implicated in the interaction with chromatin. Expression of Brd4 correlates with cell growth and is induced during early G1 upon mitogenic stimuli. In the present study, we investigated the role of Brd4 in cell growth regulation. We found that ectopic expression of Brd4 in NIH 3T3 and HeLa cells inhibits cell cycle progression from G1 to S. Coimmunoprecipitation experiments showed that endogenous and transfected Brd4 interacts with replication factor C (RFC), the conserved five-subunit complex essential for DNA replication. In vitro analysis showed that Brd4 binds directly to the largest subunit, RFC-140, thereby interacting with the entire RFC. In line with the inhibitory activity seen in vivo, recombinant Brd4 inhibited RFC-dependent DNA elongation reactions in vitro. Analysis of Brd4 deletion mutants indicated that both the interaction with RFC-140 and the inhibition of entry into S phase are dependent on the second bromodomain of Brd4. Lastly, supporting the functional importance of this interaction, it was found that cotransfection with RFC-140 reduced the growth-inhibitory effect of Brd4. Taken as a whole, the present study suggests that Brd4 regulates cell cycle progression in part by interacting with RFC.


2005 ◽  
Vol 25 (23) ◽  
pp. 10205-10219 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luke F. Peterson ◽  
Anita Boyapati ◽  
Velvizhi Ranganathan ◽  
Atsushi Iwama ◽  
Daniel G. Tenen ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT The family of cyclin D proteins plays a crucial role in the early events of the mammalian cell cycle. Recent studies have revealed the involvement of AML1 transactivation activity in promoting cell cycle progression through the induction of cyclin D proteins. This information in combination with our previous observation that a region in AML1 between amino acids 213 and 289 is important for its function led us to investigate prospective proteins associating with this region. We identified cyclin D3 by a yeast two-hybrid screen and detected AML1 interaction with the cyclin D family by both in vitro pull-down and in vivo coimmunoprecipitation assays. Furthermore, we demonstrate that cyclin D3 negatively regulates the transactivation activity of AML1 in a dose-dependent manner by competing with CBFβ for AML1 association, leading to a decreased binding affinity of AML1 for its target DNA sequence. AML1 and its fusion protein AML1-ETO have been shown to shorten and prolong the mammalian cell cycle, respectively. In addition, AML1 promotes myeloid cell differentiation. Thus, our observations suggest that the direct association of cyclin D3 with AML1 functions as a putative feedback mechanism to regulate cell cycle progression and differentiation.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Francesca Maria Orlandella ◽  
Giovanni Smaldone ◽  
Giuliana Salvatore ◽  
Luigi Vitagliano ◽  
Alessandra Cianflone ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) represent a diverse class of RNAs involved in the regulation of various physiological and pathological cellular processes, including transcription, intracellular trafficking, and chromosome remodeling. LncRNAs deregulation was linked to the development and progression of various cancer types, such as acute leukemias. In this context, lncRNAs were also evaluated as a novel class of biomarkers for cancer diagnosis and prognosis. Here, we analyzed TEX41 in childhood B cell acute lymphoid leukemia (B-ALL). Methods Total RNA was extracted from pediatric B-ALL patients (at diagnosis and after induction of therapy) and from healthy subjects. Total RNA was also extracted from different leukemia cell line models. The expression level of TEX41 was evaluated by q-RT-PCR. Also, the dataset deposited by St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital was consulted. Furthermore, the silencing of TEX41 in RS4;11 cell line was obtained by 2′-Deoxy, 2′Fluroarabino Nucleic Acids (2′F-ANAs) Oligonucleotides, and the effect on cell proliferation was evaluated. Cell cycle progression and its regulators were analyzed by flow cytometry and immunoblotting. Results We exploited the St Jude Cloud database and found that TEX41 is a lncRNA primarily expressed in the case of B-ALL (n = 79) while its expression levels are low/absent for T-cell ALL (n = 25) and acute myeloid leukemia (n = 38). The association of TEX41 with B-ALL was confirmed by real-time PCR assays. TEX41 disclosed increased expression levels in bone marrow from patients with B-ALL at diagnosis, while its expression levels became low or absent when retested in Bone Marrow cells of the same patient after 1 month of induction therapy. Also, silencing experiments performed on RS4;11 cells showed that TEX41 downregulation impaired in vitro leukemic cell growth determining their arrest in the G2-M phase and the deregulation of cell cycle proteins. Conclusions Our findings highlight that TEX41 is an upregulated lncRNA in the case of B-ALL and this feature makes it a novel potential biomarker for the diagnosis of this leukemia subtype in pediatric patients. Finally, TEX41 expression seems to be critical for leukemic proliferation, indeed, silencing experiments targeting TEX41 mRNA in the RS4;11 cell line hampered in vitro cell growth and cell cycle progression, by inducing G2-M arrest as confirmed propidium iodide staining and by the upregulation of p53 and p21 proteins.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karen Baker ◽  
Irene A. Gyamfi ◽  
Gregory I. Mashanov ◽  
Justin E. Molloy ◽  
Michael A. Geeves ◽  
...  

AbstractAll cells have the ability to respond to changes in their environment. Signalling networks modulate cytoskeleton and membrane organisation to impact cell cycle progression, polarised cell growth and multicellular development according to the environmental setting. Using diverse in vitro, in vivo and single molecule techniques we have explored the role of myosin-1 signalling in regulating endocytosis during both mitotic and meiotic cell cycles. We have established that a conserved serine within the neck region of the sole fission yeast myosin-1 is phosphorylated in a TORC2 dependent manner to modulate myosin function. Myo1 neck phosphorylation brings about a change in the conformation of the neck region and modifies its interaction with calmodulins, Myo1 dynamics at endocytic foci, and promotes calcium dependent switching between different calmodulin light chains. These data provide insight into a novel mechanism by which myosin neck phosphorylation modulates acto-myosin dynamics to control polarised cell growth in response to mitotic and meiotic cell-cycle progression and the cellular environment.


1997 ◽  
Vol 20 (3) ◽  
pp. 397-403 ◽  
Author(s):  
Miguel A. Reigosa ◽  
Sonia Soloneski ◽  
Carlos F. Garcia ◽  
Marcelo L. Larramendy

The effect of co-culturing varying concentrations of pig and human red blood cells (RBCs) on the baseline frequency of sister chromatid exchanges (SCEs) and cell-cycle progression in pig plasma (PLCs) and whole blood leukocyte cultures (WBCs) was studied. No variation in SCE frequency was observed between pig control WBC and PLC. Addition of pig and human RBCs to pig PLCs did not modify the baseline frequency of SCEs. On the other hand, cell proliferation was slower in PLCs than in WBCs. The addition of pig or human RBCs to PLCs accelerated the cell-cycle progression of pig lymphocytes. When RBCs were added to PLCs the concentration and time sequence of RBC incorporation affected the cell-cycle progression of swine lymphocytes. When doses of pig or human RBCs equivalent to those present in WBCs were added immediately after PLC stimulation, the cell-cycle kinetics were similar to those of WBCs. Shorter co-incubation periods or a reduction in the dose of RBCs made cell-cycle progression intermediate between PLC and WBC values. Thus, pig and human RBCs modulated the in vitro cell-cycle progression of pig lymphocytes in a time- and dose-dependent manner, and the low baseline frequency of SCEs of pig lymphocytes is independent of the presence or absence of erythrocytes in culture


Blood ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 108 (11) ◽  
pp. 742-742
Author(s):  
Anupriya Agarwal ◽  
Thomas G.P. Bumm ◽  
Amie Corbin ◽  
Thomas O’Hare ◽  
Marc Loriaux ◽  
...  

Abstract Background:The cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p27 is a central regulator of cell cycle progression, whose function is perturbed in many human cancers, either due to decreased expression or abnormal localization. p27 levels are negatively correlated with Skp2, the F-box protein of SCFSKP2, a E3 ubiquitin ligase targeting nuclear p27 for degradation. Skp2 has been shown to cooperate with mutant Ras in in vitro transformation assays, implicating Skp2 as a bona fide oncogene. In chronic myeloid leukemia cell lines, p27 is down-regulated in a Bcr-Abl dependent fashion, while cytoplasmic accumulation has been described in primary CML cells. We herefore hypothesized that Bcr-Abl may regulate p27 via Skp2. Experimental approach and results:Mo7e-p210BCR-ABL treated with 2.5 μM imatinib arrested in G0/G1 in a time-dependent manner (53.6±2, 58.3±2, 71.9±1% at 4, 8 and 16h), correlated with reduced in vitro kinase activity of Cdk2 (32% of controls at 16h). Western blot analysis showed a marginal increase of cytoplasmic p27 and 2.5-fold accumulation of nuclear p27 that preceded G0/1 arrest. Despite the reduced Cdk2 activity, most p27 was phosphorylated on T187, a target of cdk2/cyclinE, suggesting reduced degradation of phospo-p27 (T187). Degradation of nuclear p27 is mediated by SCFSKP2 and degradation of cytoplasmic p27 by the recently discovered KPC complex. We therefore assayed expression SCFSKP2 components and KPC1/2 by immunoblot analysis of imatinib-treated cells. Skp2 expression was greatly reduced compared to controls while expression of other SCFSKP2 components and KPC1/2 was unchanged, consistent with up-regulation of nuclear but not cytoplasmic p27 and suggesting a central role of Skp2 in mediating p27 degradation in Bcr-Abl positive cells. To test whether Skp2 is crucial for Bcr-Abl-driven leukemogenesis, we infected bone marrow of Skp2+/+ and Skp2−/− mice with BCR-ABL retrovirus. No consistent difference was observed in B-cell transformation assay (Whitlock-Witte cultures). However, formation of myeloid colonies in semisolid media was reduced in Skp2−/− compared to Skp2+/+ marrow [46.4±10% of controls (p=0.002) without and 76.6±9% of controls (p=0.008) with cytokines, n=6]. Skp2+/+ mice transplanted with BCR-ABL infected Skp2−/− marrow had significantly longer median survival (19days, range 12–60days, n=8) compared to recipients of Skp2+/+ marrow (13days, range 12–22days, n=10) (p=0.0034) with significant reduction of spleen weight (0.42±0.07g vs. 0.28±0.09g, p=0.004) and white blood cell counts (median 59x103/μl, range 9.6–142x103/μl, vs. 7.9x103/μl, range 0.8–87x103/μl, p=0.02). Histology and immunophenotyping of tissues (blood, marrow, spleen) revealed no signinificant differences between Skp2+/+ and Skp2−/− mice. Conclusions: Our data suggest that the primary cell cycle effect of Bcr-Abl kinase is up-regulation of Skp2. This leads to increased activity of SCFSKP2, inducing degradation of T187 phosphorylated p27 which in turn promotes cell cycle progression by relieving suppression of Cdk2. Skp2 is required for Bcr-Abl to fully realize its potential to induce myeloproliferative disease, providing the first in vivo evidence that SKP2 is an oncogene. Targeting Skp2-p27 interactions to prevent p27 degradation may be therapeutically useful in malignancies with a high Skp2/p27 ratio.


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