[HTML][HTML] Identification of cytotoxic drugs that selectively target tumor cells with MYC overexpression

A Frenzel, H Zirath, M Vita, A Albihn, MA Henriksson - PloS one, 2011 - journals.plos.org
A Frenzel, H Zirath, M Vita, A Albihn, MA Henriksson
PloS one, 2011journals.plos.org
Expression of MYC is deregulated in a wide range of human cancers, and is often
associated with aggressive disease and poorly differentiated tumor cells. Identification of
compounds with selectivity for cells overexpressing MYC would hence be beneficial for the
treatment of these tumors. For this purpose we used cell lines with conditional MYCN or c-
MYC expression, to screen a library of 80 conventional cytotoxic compounds for their ability
to reduce tumor cell viability and/or growth in a MYC dependent way. We found that 25% of …
Expression of MYC is deregulated in a wide range of human cancers, and is often associated with aggressive disease and poorly differentiated tumor cells. Identification of compounds with selectivity for cells overexpressing MYC would hence be beneficial for the treatment of these tumors. For this purpose we used cell lines with conditional MYCN or c-MYC expression, to screen a library of 80 conventional cytotoxic compounds for their ability to reduce tumor cell viability and/or growth in a MYC dependent way. We found that 25% of the studied compounds induced apoptosis and/or inhibited proliferation in a MYC-specific manner. The activities of the majority of these were enhanced both by c-MYC or MYCN over-expression. Interestingly, these compounds were acting on distinct cellular targets, including microtubules (paclitaxel, podophyllotoxin, vinblastine) and topoisomerases (10-hydroxycamptothecin, camptothecin, daunorubicin, doxorubicin, etoposide) as well as DNA, RNA and protein synthesis and turnover (anisomycin, aphidicholin, gliotoxin, MG132, methotrexate, mitomycin C). Our data indicate that MYC overexpression sensitizes cells to disruption of specific pathways and that in most cases c-MYC and MYCN overexpression have similar effects on the responses to cytotoxic compounds. Treatment of the cells with topoisomerase I inhibitors led to down-regulation of MYC protein levels, while doxorubicin and the small molecule MYRA-A was found to disrupt MYC-Max interaction. We conclude that the MYC pathway is only targeted by a subset of conventional cytotoxic drugs currently used in the clinic. Elucidating the mechanisms underlying their specificity towards MYC may be of importance for optimizing treatment of tumors with MYC deregulation. Our data also underscores that MYC is an attractive target for novel therapies and that cellular screenings of chemical libraries can be a powerful tool for identifying compounds with a desired biological activity.
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