| Literature DB >> 26219258 |
Nicholas C Wolff1,2,3, Andrea Pavía-Jiménez1,2,3, Vanina T Tcheuyap1,2,3, Shane Alexander1,2,3, Mridula Vishwanath4,5, Alana Christie1, Xian-Jin Xie1, Noelle S Williams1,4, Payal Kapur1,6, Bruce Posner4, Renée M McKay1,3, James Brugarolas1,2,3.
Abstract
Renal cell carcinoma (RCC) accounts for 85% of primary renal neoplasms, and is rarely curable when metastatic. Approximately 70% of RCCs are clear-cell type (ccRCC), and in >80% the von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) gene is mutated or silenced. We developed a novel, high-content, screening strategy for the identification of small molecules that are synthetic lethal with genes mutated in cancer. In this strategy, the screen and counterscreen are conducted simultaneously by differentially labeling mutant and reconstituted isogenic tumor cell line pairs with different fluorochromes and using a highly sensitive high-throughput imaging-based platform. This approach minimizes confounding factors from sequential screening, and more accurately replicates the in vivo cancer setting where cancer cells are adjacent to normal cells. A screen of ~12,800 small molecules identified homoharringtonine (HHT), an FDA-approved drug for treating chronic myeloid leukemia, as a VHL-synthetic lethal agent in ccRCC. HHT induced apoptosis in VHL-mutant, but not VHL-reconstituted, ccRCC cells, and inhibited tumor growth in 30% of VHL-mutant patient-derived ccRCC tumorgraft lines tested. Building on a novel screening strategy and utilizing a validated RCC tumorgraft model recapitulating the genetics and drug responsiveness of human RCC, these studies identify HHT as a potential therapeutic agent for a subset of VHL-deficient ccRCCs.Entities:
Keywords: high-content drug screen; omacetaxine mepesuccinate; patiend-derived xenografts; tumorgrafts
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26219258 PMCID: PMC4627284 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.4773
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1Screening strategy to identify compounds that are synthetic lethal with VHL
A. Schematic diagram of a ~12,800 chemical library synthetic lethal screen. VHL-deficient 786-O cells stably transduced with an empty vector control (EV) or a VHL-expressing retrovirus (VHL-HA) were differentially labeled with eGFP-Histone H2B (eGFP-H2B) and mCherry-tagged H2B respectively, and after 24 hours the chemical library was dispensed (final concentration of 5 μM) and cells cultured for 48 hours in the presence of 2 nM rapamycin. Fluorescence imaging (using the BD Pathway 855 imager) was used to identify compounds preferentially depleting VHL-deficient/GFP-positive cells after cells were segmented. B. Left panel: Representative image of fluorescence signal from Hoescht-labeled 786-O cells. Right panel: overlay of GFP fluorescence signal (green; from 786-O EVGFP cells) and mCherry fluorescence nuclear signal (red; VHLmCh cells). C. Flow chart showing the selection criteria utilized to narrow down compounds for further analysis. Toxicity was determined as ≤100 VHLmCh cells per field. SD, standard deviation.
Figure 2Homoharringtonine (HHT) preferentially induces cell death in VHL-deficient 786-O cells
A. 786-O cells with VHL mutation (green) or with VHL-reconstituted (red) were treated with different concentrations of HHT (0, 25, 50, or 100 nM) for 0, 6, 12, 24, 36, or 48 hours, and cell death was measured by trypan blue exclusion assay (n = 3 for each concentration and time point; *p < 0.05, **p < 0.001, ***p < 0.0001 between 786-O EV cells and 786-O with VHL reconstituted at the same concentration and time point). B. Western blot analysis of 786-O EVGFP (EV) or VHLmCh (VHL) cells treated with 100 nM HHT for 0, 3, 6, 12, or 24 hours. Blots were probed for Bcl-xL and Caspase 9, and α-Tubulin as loading control. Arrow indicates the cleaved Caspase 9 product.
Pharmacokinetic analysis of HHT in mice
| 0.4 mg/kg | 0.7 mg/kg | 2 mg/kg | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Terminal t½ (hr) | 1.86 | 2.80 | 6.74 |
| Tmax (hr) | 0.17 | 0.17 | 1.50 |
| Cmax (ng/ml) | 28.8 | 57.8 | 97.2 |
| AUCinf | 251.0 | 439.8 | 905.2 |
| Vz/F (ml) | 87.7 | 123.2 | 453.3 |
| Cl/F (ml/hr) | 32.7 | 30.5 | 46.6 |
Terminal t½: terminal half-life; Tmax: time to maximal drug concentration; Cmax: maximal drug concentration; AUCinf: area under the concentration time curve (AUC) from time 0 to infinity; Vz/F: apparent volume of distribution; Cl/F: apparent total body clearance. PK parameters were determined using the noncompartmental analysis tool in Phoenix WinNonlin.
Figure 3HHT inhibits tumor growth in a ccRCC tumorgraft model
A-F, Tumorgraft lines were treated with vehicle control, HHT (0.7 mg/kg), rapamycin (0.5 mg/kg), (or the combination, where indicated) and tumor growth was measured on the indicated days. Day 0 represents the first day of treatment.
Figure 4HHT treatment inhibits tumor growth with no severe toxicity
A. and B. Average weight of tumors in grams (g) harvested from XP26 and XP144 tumorgraft lines treated with vehicle (Veh), homoharringtonine (HHT; 0/7 mg/kg), or rapamycin (Rapa; 0.5 mg/kg). C. and D. Average weight of XP26 and XP144 cohort mice in grams (g) taken at the indicated days prior to and over the course of the indicated drug treatment. Day 0 represents the first day of treatment.
Figure 5Analysis of tumors from HHT-responsive tumorgraft lines, XP26 and XP144
A. and B. Macroscopic (first panel in each row) and microscopic (next four panels of each row: progressively higher magnification) hematoxylin and eosin stained images of representative tumors harvested from tumorgraft lines XP26 (A) and XP144 (B) treated with vehicle, rapamycin (Rapa), or homoharringtonine (HHT). Tumor necrosis (depicted by star) and associated neutrophilic infiltrate (depicted by arrow) is more pronounced in tumors treated with HHT and is observed in those treated with Rapa but not seen in tumors treated with vehicle.