C3J Therapeutics (United States)
Publishes on Cancer Mechanisms and Therapy, Protein Kinase Regulation and GTPase Signaling, Melanoma and MAPK Pathways. 81 papers and 4.1k citations.
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The farnesyltransferase inhibitor L-744,832 selectively blocks the transformed phenotype of cultured cells expressing a mutated H-ras gene and induces dramatic regression of mammary and salivary carcinomas in mouse mammary tumor virus (MMTV)-v-Ha-ras transgenic mice. To better understand how the farnesyltransferase inhibitors might be used in the treatment of human tumors, we have further explored the mechanisms by which L-744,832 induces tumor regression in a variety of transgenic mouse tumor models. We assessed whether L-744,832 induces apoptosis or alterations in cell cycle distribution and found that the tumor regression in MMTV-v-Ha-ras mice could be attributed entirely to elevation of apoptosis levels. In contrast, treatment with doxorubicin, which induces apoptosis in many tumor types, had a minimal effect on apoptosis in these tumors and resulted in a less dramatic tumor response. To determine whether functional p53 is required for L-744,832-induced apoptosis and the resultant tumor regression, MMTV-v-Ha-ras mice were interbred with p53(-/-) mice. Tumors in ras/p53(-/-) mice treated with L-744,832 regressed as efficiently as MMTV-v-Ha-ras tumors, although this response was found to be mediated by both the induction of apoptosis and an increase in G1 with a corresponding decrease in the S-phase fraction. MMTV-v-Ha-ras mice were also interbred with MMTV-c-myc mice to determine whether ras/myc tumors, which possess high levels of spontaneous apoptosis, have the potential to regress through a further increase in apoptosis levels. The ras/myc tumors were found to respond nearly as efficiently to L-744,832 treatment as the MMTV-v-Ha-ras tumors, although no induction of apoptosis was observed. Rather, the tumor regression in the ras/myc mice was found to be mediated by a large reduction in the S-phase fraction. In contrast, treatment of transgenic mice harboring an activated MMTV-c-neu gene did not result in tumor regression. These results demonstrate that a farnesyltransferase inhibitor can induce regression of v-Ha-ras-bearing tumors by multiple mechanisms, including the activation of a suppressed apoptotic pathway, which is largely p53 independent, or by cell cycle alterations, depending upon the presence of various other oncogenic genetic alterations.
We have isolated cDNAs encoding the alpha and beta subunits of human farnesyl-protein transferase (FPTase). The proteins encoded by these two cDNAs are 93-95% identical to the corresponding subunits of bovine and rat FPTase and show regions of homology with proteins encoded by Saccharomyces cerevisiae prenyl-protein transferase genes. Human FPTase expressed in Escherichia coli from a translationally coupled operon had kinetic properties similar to those of FPTase isolated from bovine brain. Examination of farnesyl diphosphate binding indicated that while neither individual subunit was capable of isoprenoid binding, a radiolabeled farnesyl diphosphate analog could be specifically photo-cross-linked to the beta subunit of FPTase holoenzyme. To further analyze subunit structure-function and to detect functional similarities with yeast prenyl-protein transferases (FPTase and two geranylgeranyl-protein transferases), amino acid changes homologous to those found in mutant yeast prenyl-protein transferase subunits were made in the subunits of human FPTase. Substitutions in either the alpha or beta subunits that decrease the activity of yeast prenyl-protein transferases were also observed to impair human FPTase. Kinetic analyses showed that these mutant human FPTases have Km and kcat values that are altered with respect to wild-type human FPTase.
A series of dimeric compounds based on the AVPI motif of Smac were designed and prepared as antagonists of the inhibitor of apoptosis proteins (IAPs). Optimization of cellular potency, physical properties, and pharmacokinetic parameters led to the identification of compound 14 (AZD5582), which binds potently to the BIR3 domains of cIAP1, cIAP2, and XIAP (IC50 = 15, 21, and 15 nM, respectively). This compound causes cIAP1 degradation and induces apoptosis in the MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cell line at subnanomolar concentrations in vitro. When administered intravenously to MDA-MB-231 xenograft-bearing mice, 14 results in cIAP1 degradation and caspase-3 cleavage within tumor cells and causes substantial tumor regressions following two weekly doses of 3.0 mg/kg. Antiproliferative effects are observed with 14 in only a small subset of the over 200 cancer cell lines examined, consistent with other published IAP inhibitors. As a result of its in vitro and in vivo profile, 14 was nominated as a candidate for clinical development.