Literature DB >> 12460905

Antitumor effect of the human immunodeficiency virus protease inhibitor ritonavir: induction of tumor-cell apoptosis associated with perturbation of proteasomal proteolysis.

Simone Gaedicke1, Elke Firat-Geier, Oana Constantiniu, Maria Lucchiari-Hartz, Marina Freudenberg, Chris Galanos, Gabriele Niedermann.   

Abstract

Ritonavir is an HIV protease inhibitor used in the therapy of HIV infection. Ritonavir has also been shown to inhibit the chymotrypsin-like activity of isolated 20S proteasomes. Here, we demonstrate that ritonavir, like classical proteasome inhibitors, has antitumoral activities. In vitro, ritonavir strongly reduced the rate of proliferation of several tumor cell lines and induced their apoptosis. Nontransformed cell lines and terminally differentiated bone-marrow macrophages were comparatively resistant to the apoptosis-inducing effect. In vivo, ritonavir, administered p.o. for a week at doses of 6-8.8 mg/mouse/day, caused significant growth inhibition (76-79% after 7 days of treatment) of established EL4-T cell thymomas growing s.c. in syngeneic C57BL/6 mice. Unexpectedly, we found that ritonavir activates the chymotrypsin-like activity of isolated 26S proteasomes, in strong contrast to its effect on isolated 20S proteasomes. The net effect of low micromolar concentrations of ritonavir on the chymotrypsin-like activity in cells and cell lysates was a weak inhibition, consistent with marginal alterations of polyubiquitinated proteins, marginal alterations in acid-soluble proteolytic peptide levels, and a small accumulation of the tumor suppressor protein p53, in cells treated with ritonavir. In contrast, we found a relatively strong accumulation of the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p21(WAF-1), a sign of deregulation of cell-cycle progression typical for apoptosis induction in transformed cells by classical proteasome inhibitors. We demonstrate that p21 accumulation in the presence of ritonavir is attributable to the inhibition of proteolytic degradation. Accumulation of p21 most likely reflects a selective inhibition of proteasomes, in line with the atypical degradation of p21, which does not require ubiquitination. These findings suggest that selective perturbation of proteasomal protein degradation may play a role in the antitumoral activities of ritonavir.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12460905

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cancer Res        ISSN: 0008-5472            Impact factor:   12.701


  36 in total

1.  Inhibition of adenine nucleotide translocator pore function and protection against apoptosis in vivo by an HIV protease inhibitor.

Authors:  Joel G R Weaver; Agathe Tarze; Tia C Moffat; Morgane Lebras; Aurelien Deniaud; Catherine Brenner; Gary D Bren; Mario Y Morin; Barbara N Phenix; Li Dong; Susan X Jiang; Valerie L Sim; Bogdan Zurakowski; Jessica Lallier; Heather Hardin; Peter Wettstein; Rolf P G van Heeswijk; Andre Douen; Romano T Kroemer; Sheng T Hou; Steffany A L Bennett; David H Lynch; Guido Kroemer; Andrew D Badley
Journal:  J Clin Invest       Date:  2005-07       Impact factor: 14.808

Review 2.  HIV protease inhibitors impact on apoptosis.

Authors:  Stacey A Rizza; Andrew D Badley
Journal:  Med Chem       Date:  2008-01       Impact factor: 2.745

3.  Repositioning HIV protease inhibitors as cancer therapeutics.

Authors:  Wendy B Bernstein; Phillip A Dennis
Journal:  Curr Opin HIV AIDS       Date:  2008-11       Impact factor: 4.283

4.  Use of boosted protease inhibitors reduces Kaposi sarcoma incidence among male veterans with HIV infection.

Authors:  Marc A Kowalkowski; Jennifer R Kramer; Peter R Richardson; Insia Suteria; Elizabeth Y Chiao
Journal:  Clin Infect Dis       Date:  2015-01-13       Impact factor: 9.079

5.  Phase II trial of ritonavir/lopinavir in patients with progressive or recurrent high-grade gliomas.

Authors:  Manmeet S Ahluwalia; Carol Patton; Glen Stevens; Tanya Tekautz; Lilyana Angelov; Michael A Vogelbaum; Robert J Weil; Sam Chao; Paul Elson; John H Suh; Gene H Barnett; David M Peereboom
Journal:  J Neurooncol       Date:  2010-08-04       Impact factor: 4.130

6.  Sequence-specific alterations of epitope production by HIV protease inhibitors.

Authors:  Georgio Kourjian; Yang Xu; Ijah Mondesire-Crump; Mariko Shimada; Pauline Gourdain; Sylvie Le Gall
Journal:  J Immunol       Date:  2014-03-10       Impact factor: 5.422

7.  Differential regulation of p21 (waf1) protein half-life by DNA damage and Nutlin-3 in p53 wild-type tumors and its therapeutic implications.

Authors:  Li-Ju Chang; Alan Eastman
Journal:  Cancer Biol Ther       Date:  2012-07-24       Impact factor: 4.742

Review 8.  Insights into the broad cellular effects of nelfinavir and the HIV protease inhibitors supporting their role in cancer treatment and prevention.

Authors:  Soren Gantt; Corey Casper; Richard F Ambinder
Journal:  Curr Opin Oncol       Date:  2013-09       Impact factor: 3.645

9.  HIV protease inhibitors provide neuroprotection through inhibition of mitochondrial apoptosis in mice.

Authors:  Toshio Hisatomi; Toru Nakazawa; Kousuke Noda; Lama Almulki; Shinsuke Miyahara; Shintaro Nakao; Yasuhiro Ito; Haicheng She; Riichiro Kohno; Norman Michaud; Tatsuro Ishibashi; Ali Hafezi-Moghadam; Andrew D Badley; Guido Kroemer; Joan W Miller
Journal:  J Clin Invest       Date:  2008-06       Impact factor: 14.808

10.  Ritonavir blocks AKT signaling, activates apoptosis and inhibits migration and invasion in ovarian cancer cells.

Authors:  Sanjeev Kumar; Christopher S Bryant; Sreedhar Chamala; Aamer Qazi; Shelly Seward; Jagannath Pal; Christopher P Steffes; Donald W Weaver; Robert Morris; John M Malone; Masood A Shammas; Madhu Prasad; Ramesh B Batchu
Journal:  Mol Cancer       Date:  2009-04-22       Impact factor: 27.401

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