Literature DB >> 27643954

A Pharmacological Chaperone Molecule Induces Cancer Cell Death by Restoring Tertiary DNA Structures in Mutant hTERT Promoters.

Hyun-Jin Kang1, Yunxi Cui2, Holly Yin3, Amy Scheid4, William P D Hendricks3, Jessica Schmidt5, Aleksandar Sekulic5, Deming Kong6, Jeffrey M Trent3, Vijay Gokhale7, Hanbin Mao2, Laurence H Hurley1,7,8.   

Abstract

Activation of human telomerase reverse transcriptase (hTERT) is necessary for limitless replication in tumorigenesis. Whereas hTERT is transcriptionally silenced in normal cells, most tumor cells reactivate hTERT expression by alleviating transcriptional repression through diverse genetic and epigenetic mechanisms. Transcription-activating hTERT promoter mutations have been found to occur at high frequencies in multiple cancer types. These mutations have been shown to form new transcription factor binding sites that drive hTERT expression, but this model cannot fully account for differences in wild-type (WT) and mutant promoter activation and has not yet enabled a selective therapeutic strategy. Here, we demonstrate a novel mechanism by which promoter mutations activate hTERT transcription, which also sheds light on a unique therapeutic opportunity. Promoter mutations occur in a core promoter region that forms tertiary structures consisting of a pair of G-quadruplexes involved in transcriptional silencing. We show that promoter mutations exert a detrimental effect on the folding of one of these G-quadruplexes, resulting in a nonfunctional silencer element that alleviates transcriptional repression. We have also identified a small drug-like pharmacological chaperone (pharmacoperone) molecule, GTC365, that acts at an early step in the G-quadruplex folding pathway to redirect mutant promoter G-quadruplex misfolding, partially reinstate the correct folding pathway, and reduce hTERT activity through transcriptional repression. This transcription-mediated repression produces cancer cell death through multiple routes including both induction of apoptosis through inhibition of hTERT's role in regulating apoptosis-related proteins and induction of senescence by decreasing telomerase activity and telomere length. We demonstrate the selective therapeutic potential of this strategy in melanoma cells that overexpress hTERT.

Entities:  

Year:  2016        PMID: 27643954     DOI: 10.1021/jacs.6b07598

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Am Chem Soc        ISSN: 0002-7863            Impact factor:   15.419


  28 in total

1.  Expression of the human telomerase reverse transcriptase gene is modulated by quadruplex formation in its first exon due to DNA methylation.

Authors:  Pei-Tzu Li; Zi-Fu Wang; I-Te Chu; Yen-Min Kuan; Ming-Hao Li; Mu-Ching Huang; Pei-Chi Chiang; Ta-Chau Chang; Chin-Tin Chen
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  2017-10-30       Impact factor: 5.157

2.  Small-Molecule-Targeting Hairpin Loop of hTERT Promoter G-Quadruplex Induces Cancer Cell Death.

Authors:  Jin H Song; Hyun-Jin Kang; Libia A Luevano; Vijay Gokhale; Kui Wu; Ritu Pandey; H-H Sherry Chow; Laurence H Hurley; Andrew S Kraft
Journal:  Cell Chem Biol       Date:  2019-05-30       Impact factor: 8.116

3.  High-Throughput Screening of G-Quadruplex Ligands by FRET Assay.

Authors:  Kaibo Wang; Daniel P Flaherty; Lan Chen; Danzhou Yang
Journal:  Methods Mol Biol       Date:  2019

Review 4.  When the Ends Are Really the Beginnings: Targeting Telomerase for Treatment of GBM.

Authors:  Saumya R Bollam; Michael E Berens; Harshil D Dhruv
Journal:  Curr Neurol Neurosci Rep       Date:  2018-03-10       Impact factor: 5.081

Review 5.  Melanoma: Genetic Abnormalities, Tumor Progression, Clonal Evolution and Tumor Initiating Cells.

Authors:  Ugo Testa; Germana Castelli; Elvira Pelosi
Journal:  Med Sci (Basel)       Date:  2017-11-20

Review 6.  Modulation of DNA structure formation using small molecules.

Authors:  Imee M A Del Mundo; Karen M Vasquez; Guliang Wang
Journal:  Biochim Biophys Acta Mol Cell Res       Date:  2019-09-03       Impact factor: 4.739

7.  The hTERT core promoter forms three parallel G-quadruplexes.

Authors:  Robert C Monsen; Lynn DeLeeuw; William L Dean; Robert D Gray; T Michael Sabo; Srinivas Chakravarthy; Jonathan B Chaires; John O Trent
Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  2020-06-04       Impact factor: 16.971

8.  Insight into the Complexity of the i-Motif and G-Quadruplex DNA Structures Formed in the KRAS Promoter and Subsequent Drug-Induced Gene Repression.

Authors:  Christine E Kaiser; Natalie A Van Ert; Prashansa Agrawal; Reena Chawla; Danzhou Yang; Laurence H Hurley
Journal:  J Am Chem Soc       Date:  2017-06-15       Impact factor: 15.419

Review 9.  Non-duplex G-Quadruplex Structures Emerge as Mediators of Epigenetic Modifications.

Authors:  Ananda Kishore Mukherjee; Shalu Sharma; Shantanu Chowdhury
Journal:  Trends Genet       Date:  2018-12-04       Impact factor: 11.639

10.  Non-duplex G-Quadruplex DNA Structure: A Developing Story from Predicted Sequences to DNA Structure-Dependent Epigenetics and Beyond.

Authors:  Antara Sengupta; Shuvra Shekhar Roy; Shantanu Chowdhury
Journal:  Acc Chem Res       Date:  2020-12-21       Impact factor: 22.384

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