Literature DB >> 18343365

Spisulosine (ES-285) induces prostate tumor PC-3 and LNCaP cell death by de novo synthesis of ceramide and PKCzeta activation.

Ana M Sánchez1, Sophie Malagarie-Cazenave, Nuria Olea, Diana Vara, Carmen Cuevas, Inés Díaz-Laviada.   

Abstract

During the past decades, intense attention has been focused on the anti-tumor properties of marine compounds which some of them have been revealed as potent apoptotic inducers. In the present work, we studied the mechanism of action of a new compound, Spisulosine (ES-285), isolated from the sea mollusc Spisula polynyma, in the prostate tumor PC-3 and LNCaP cell lines. Spisulosine inhibited cell proliferation with an IC50 of 1 microM in both cell lines, although it was more effective in the androgen-independent PC-3 cells. The anti-proliferative effect induced by Spisulosine in prostate cells was independent of peroxisome proliferator activated receptor gamma (PPARgamma) and phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/(PI3K/Akt), Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK), p38 or classical protein kinase C (PKCs) pathways, as it was inferred from the results obtained with specific inhibitors of these routes. However, Spisulosine treatment of prostate cells induced an increase in the intracellular ceramide levels, that was totally blocked by the ceramide synthase inhibitor Fumonisin B1, indicating that the ceramide accumulation came from the de novo biosynthesis. Spisulosine also induced in both PC-3 and LNCaP cells, an activation of the atypical PKC isoform, PKCzeta, which is one of the target proteins of ceramide. These results indicate that the marine compound Spisulosine inhibits the growth of the prostate PC-3 and LNCaP cells through intracellular ceramide accumulation and PKCzeta activation.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18343365     DOI: 10.1016/j.ejphar.2008.02.011

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Pharmacol        ISSN: 0014-2999            Impact factor:   4.432


  22 in total

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4.  Phase I dose-escalating study of ES-285 given as a three-hour intravenous infusion every three weeks in patients with advanced malignant solid tumors.

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6.  Quantifying 1-deoxydihydroceramides and 1-deoxyceramides in mouse nervous system tissue.

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8.  Ceramide synthesis is modulated by the sphingosine analog FTY720 via a mixture of uncompetitive and noncompetitive inhibition in an Acyl-CoA chain length-dependent manner.

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9.  Ceramide synthase inhibition by fumonisin B1 causes accumulation of 1-deoxysphinganine: a novel category of bioactive 1-deoxysphingoid bases and 1-deoxydihydroceramides biosynthesized by mammalian cell lines and animals.

Authors:  Nicholas C Zitomer; Trevor Mitchell; Kenneth A Voss; Genevieve S Bondy; Sarah T Pruett; Ethel C Garnier-Amblard; Lanny S Liebeskind; Hyejung Park; Elaine Wang; M Cameron Sullards; Alfred H Merrill; Ronald T Riley
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10.  Hereditary sensory neuropathy type 1 is caused by the accumulation of two neurotoxic sphingolipids.

Authors:  Anke Penno; Mary M Reilly; Henry Houlden; Matilde Laurá; Katharina Rentsch; Vera Niederkofler; Esther T Stoeckli; Garth Nicholson; Florian Eichler; Robert H Brown; Arnold von Eckardstein; Thorsten Hornemann
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