| Literature DB >> 21804608 |
D Huertas1, M Soler, J Moreto, A Villanueva, A Martinez, A Vidal, M Charlton, D Moffat, S Patel, J McDermott, J Owen, D Brotherton, D Krige, S Cuthill, M Esteller.
Abstract
The approval of histone deacetylase inhibitors for treatment of lymphoma subtypes has positioned histone modifications as potential targets for the development of new classes of anticancer drugs. Histones also undergo phosphorylation events, and Haspin is a protein kinase the only known target of which is phosphorylation of histone H3 at Thr3 residue (H3T3ph), which is necessary for mitosis progression. Mitotic kinases can be blocked by small drugs and several clinical trials are underway with these agents. As occurs with Aurora kinase inhibitors, Haspin might be an optimal candidate for the pharmacological development of these compounds. A high-throughput screening for Haspin inhibitors identified the CHR-6494 compound as being one promising such agent. We demonstrate that CHR-6494 reduces H3T3ph levels in a dose-dependent manner and causes a mitotic catastrophe characterized by metaphase misalignment, spindle abnormalities and centrosome amplification. From the cellular standpoint, the identified small-molecule Haspin inhibitor causes arrest in G2/M and subsequently apoptosis. Importantly, ex vivo assays also demonstrate its anti-angiogenetic features; in vivo, it shows antitumor potential in xenografted nude mice without any observed toxicity. Thus, CHR-6494 is a first-in-class Haspin inhibitor with a wide spectrum of anticancer effects that merits further preclinical research as a new member of the family of mitotic kinase inhibitors.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21804608 PMCID: PMC3312407 DOI: 10.1038/onc.2011.335
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncogene ISSN: 0950-9232 Impact factor: 9.867
Figure 1CHR-6494 is a small-molecule inhibitor of Haspin. (a) Chemical structure of CHR-6494. (b) H3T3ph levels in human cancer cell lines upon CHR-6494 treatment determined by western blot quantified using the Odyssey IR scanner. (c) H3T3ph immunofluorescence signal in mitotic chromosomes of HeLa, HCT-116 and MDA-MB-231 cells upon CHR-6494 use. In both panels b and c, the H3T3ph mark is extremely low at 500 n concentration of the drug. Scale bar is 10 μm. (d) The use of the Haspin inhibitor does not affect the global levels of the enzyme (top). CHR-6494 does not change the phosphorylation levels of other residues of histone H3 not catalyzed by Haspin (H3S28ph and H3S10ph) (below). Total H3 is used as a loading control.
Figure 2CHR-6494 treatment decreases cell viability, causes an arrest in G2/M and later apoptosis. (a) Effect of CHR-6494 in cell viability determined by the XTT assay in HCT-116, HeLa and MDA-MB-231 cells. IC50 values are shown for each cell line. (b) Effect of CHR-6494 in the cell cycle. The percentage of G2/M cells is CHR-6494 dose dependent, indicating that progression through mitosis is delayed. (c) The proapoptotic effect of CHR-6494. Upon Haspin inhibitor use, the percentage of cell death increases in the three cancer cell lines, as demonstrated by incorporation of Annexin V.
Figure 3CHR-6494 treatment causes a mitotic catastrophe with abnormal morphology of the mitotic spindle and centrosome amplification. (a) Immunostaining of mitotic spindle with anti α-tubulin in control and CHR-6494-treated cells. (b) The percentage of anaphase in mitotic cells treated with CHR-6494 is dose dependent. (c) Immunostaining of centrosomes with anti γ-tubulin in mitotic cells treated with CHR-6494. Mitotic cells have been localized by immunostaining with the H3S10ph antibody (red staining) and marked with anti γ-tubulin (green dots), and chromosomes are labeled with DAPI in the blue channel. (d) The percentage of cells with more than two centrosomes in every mitosis after treatment with CHR-6494 increases up to three at higher concentrations of CHR-6494. (e) The percentage of cells with more than two centrosomes per prophase after treatment with CHR-6494 is also dose dependent, indicating that spindle defects are probably a consequence of centrosome amplification. The images showed in this figure are the result of the maximum Z-projection of 6–10 stacks, taken every 1 μm. Scale bar is 10 μm.
Figure 4CHR-6494 treatment upregulates the spindle assembly checkpoint protein BUB1 (a) and the marker of mitotic arrest cyclin B1. (b) Western blots and quantification of the levels of cyclin B1 and BUB1 are shown in control and CHR-6494-treated cells.
Figure 5CHR-6494 treatment inhibits ex vivo angiogenesis and in vivo tumor growth in xenografted nude mice. (a) Left, photographs of chicken embryo aortic arch ring embedded in synthetic matrix and exposed to the pro-angiogenic bFGF alone or in combination with CHR-6494 (500 n and 1 μ); right, quantification of the sprout number decreases upon Haspin inhibitor treatment (Kruskal–Wallis followed by a Mann–Whitney post hoc test). (b) Antitumoral activity of CHR-6494 in HCT-116 xenografts in nude mice. Top, tumor volume is monitored over time in mock- and CHR-6494-treated mice. Below, graphical plots at the time of killing of animals at 16 days demonstrate tumor volume reduction upon Haspin inhibitor treatment (Mann–Whitney U-test). (c) Hematoxylin–eosin staining of colon, liver and kidney sections of nude mice upon CHR-6494 treatment did not show evidence of toxicity. (d) Graph measuring the weight of mice upon treatment: the body weight of CHR-6494-treated mice did not change during the treatment period.