| Literature DB >> 23694679 |
Hee-Sheung Lee1, Nicholas C O Lee, Brenda R Grimes, Alexander Samoshkin, Artem V Kononenko, Ruchi Bansal, Hiroshi Masumoto, William C Earnshaw, Natalay Kouprina, Vladimir Larionov.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Aneuploidy is a feature of most cancer cells that is often accompanied by an elevated rate of chromosome mis-segregation termed chromosome instability (CIN). While CIN can act as a driver of cancer genome evolution and tumor progression, recent findings point to the existence of a threshold level beyond which CIN becomes a barrier to tumor growth and therefore can be exploited therapeutically. Drugs known to increase CIN beyond the therapeutic threshold are currently few in number, and the clinical promise of targeting the CIN phenotype warrants new screening efforts. However, none of the existing methods, including the in vitro micronuclei (MNi) assay, developed to quantify CIN, is entirely satisfactory.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23694679 PMCID: PMC3671967 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2407-13-252
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Drugs used in this study
| Taxol | Beta-tubulin | 10 nM-overnight | x 47 |
| Ixabepilone | Beta-tubulin | 100 nM-overnight | x 31 |
| Docetaxel | Beta-tubulin | 10 nM-2 hrs | x 10 |
| Peloruside A | Beta-tubulin | 100 nM-overnight | x 32 |
| Nocodazole | Beta-tubulin | 1 μM-overnight | x 8 |
| SAHA | HDAC | 5 μM-overnight | x 1 |
| VP16 (etoposide) | TOP2 | 8 μM-2hrs | x 7 |
| Reversine | Aurora B, MPS1 | 1 μM-3 days | x 14 |
| ZM-447439 | Aurora B | 1 μM-3 days | x 29 |
Figure 1Calculation of the rate of HAC miss-segregation induced by drug treatment. Justification of the algorithm describing the dynamics of the accumulation of HAC-less cells caused by a single dose of chromosome-destabilizing compounds. This mathematical model assumes: 1) the drug kills cells non-selectively; 2) the drug’s effect on HAC mis-segregation is not persistent and limited to the cell cycle when it is present; 3) spontaneous HAC loss after drug exposure does not change; 4) the HAC does not confer a selective advantage or disadvantage; 5) the cells are growing synchronously and 6) there is one HAC per cell. Assumptions 2) and 3) have been confirmed experimentally (see Additional file 1). (A) Our model assumes that when mis-segregation occurs during mitosis, one daughter cell will inherit a HAC while the other daughter cell does not. (B) Illustrated model of HAC lost in a population of cells. (C) Derivation of the general equation for HAC miss-segregation rate. x is the number of cells which are EGFP(+); y is the number of cell which are GFP(−); R is the probability of HAC miss-segregation; n is the number of cell divisions; P0 is the proportion of EGFP(+) cell at generation F0; P1 is the proportion of EGFP(+) cell at generation F1. (D) Calculation of rates (see Methods for more details).
Micronuclei (MNi) formation in the HAC-containing HT1080 cells treated by different drugs
| Vehicle* | 3% | 1% | 2 ± 1 |
| 10 nM Taxol | 43% | 37% | 40 ± 3 |
| 100 nM Peloruside A | 74% | 63% | 69 ± 5 |
| 1 μM ZM447439 | 56% | 57% | 57 ± 1 |
| 100 nM Nocodazole | 50% | 56% | 53 ± 3 |
*Vehicle: 0.01% DMSO (this was the highest amount of DMSO used).
** Number of MN is given as means ± SD in two independent experiments.
Figure 2Scheme of an assay for measuring chromosome instability (CIN) based on the use of HAC containing thetransgene. Cells that inherit the HAC display green fluorescence, while cells that lack it do not. It is expected that the control untreated cells should show uniform green fluorescence, while those that have lost HAC after drug treatment should be highly variable in fluorescence. Therefore, the actual number of cells with the EGFP-HAC can be measured by FACS. Thus, the compounds, which increase HAC loss and therefore increase spontaneous chromosome mis-segregation rates, may be identified.
Figure 3Schematic diagram of construction of the alphoid-HAC containing thetransgene to measure chromosome instability. (A) Three steps of MMCT to transfer the HAC. The original alphoidtetO-HAC was generated in human fibrocarcoma HT1080 cells [8]. The alphoidtetO-HAC was transferred to homologous recombination proficient chicken DT40 cells via MMCT. In chicken DT40 cells, a loxP gene loading site was generated in the HAC [13]. The modified alphoidtetO-HAC was transferred to HPRT-deficient hamster CHO cells via MMCT. (B) Loading of the EGFP-containing cassette into the HAC was carried out in hamster CHO cells. Insertion of the cassette into the loxP site of the HAC by Cre/lox-mediated recombination is accompanied by reconstitution of the HPRT gene allowing the cells selection on the HAT medium. This modified HAC was transferred back to human HT1080 cells via third round of MMCT. (C) Fluorescence images of cells carrying the HAC with the EGFP cassette are shown. (D) FISH analysis of the HAC-containing HT1080 clone. The HAC was visualized using BAC32-2-mer(tetO) DNA containing 40 kb of alphoid-tetO array cloned into a BAC vector as described previously [8] (red). Chromosomal DNA was counterstained with DAPI. The HAC is indicated by arrowhead.
Comparison between FISH and FACS data to evaluate HAC induced by drug treatment
| No drug | 86 (100)* | 85.1 ± 0.9 | 13 × 10-3 |
| Taxol | 59 (139) | 59.5 ± 0.9 | 597 × 10-3 |
| Ixabepilone | 71 (116) | 68.0 ± 0.1 | 396 × 10-3 |
| Docetaxel | 74 (101) | 79.1 ± 1.8 | 133 × 10-3 |
| Peloruside A | 68 (71) | 67.4 ± 0.9 | 411 × 10-3 |
| Nocodazole | 79 (77) | 80.3 ± 0.9 | 107 × 10-3 |
| SAHA | 79 (160) | 84.3 ± 1.2 | 12 × 10-3 |
| VP16 (Etoposide) | 86 (156) | 80.7 ± 0.9 | 96 × 10-3 |
| Reversine*** | 77 (71) | 79.0 ± 0.5 | 176 × 10-3 |
| ZM-447439*** | 75 (75) | 70.4 ± 0.5 | 374 × 10-3 |
* In parentheses, the number of metaphases screened for the presence or absence of the HAC.
** Rates of the HAC loss after drug treatment were calculated from FACS data using the formula .
*** A real rate of HAC loss may be a little bit lower after treatment by inhibitors of Aurora B and MPS1 because reversine and ZM-447439 do not completely block cell divisions.
Figure 4Two flow cytometry histograms illustrating mitotic stability of the EGFP-HAC in HT1080 cells (A) before and (B) after treatment by taxol. The x-axis represents the intensity of the fluorescence, the y-axis the number of cells. The bar stands for the amount of positive cells. The results of triplicate experiments are shown.
Figure 5Mitotic stability of the EGFP-HAC in HT1080 human cells treated by nine different drugs. A rate of HAC loss per generation was calculated as described in Methods and Figure 1. Blue bars correspond to the frequency of HAC loss when the cells were treated by taxol and its derivatives. The control corresponds to a frequency of spontaneous loss of the EGFP-HAC in human HT1080 cells.