Loading...
The dual-acting chemotherapeutic agent Alchemix induces cell death independently of ATM and p53
Thomas, A. ; Perry, T. ; Berhane, S. ; Oldreive, C. ; Zlatanou, A. ; Williams, L.R. ; Weston, V.J. ; Stankovic, T. ; Kearns, P. ; ... show 2 more
Thomas, A.
Perry, T.
Berhane, S.
Oldreive, C.
Zlatanou, A.
Williams, L.R.
Weston, V.J.
Stankovic, T.
Kearns, P.
Publication Date
01/06/2015
End of Embargo
Supervisor
Keywords
Animals, Anthraquinones, Antigens, Antineoplastic agents, Ataxia telangiectasia mutated proteins, Cell death, Cell line, DNA damage, DNA repair, DNA replication, DNA topoisomerases, DNA-Binding proteins, Dose-response relationship, G2 phase cell cycle checkpoints, Humans, Leukemia, M phase cell cycle checkpoints, Mice, Topoisomerase inhibitors, Tumor suppressor protein p53, Xenograft model antitumor assays
Rights
© 2015 The Authors. Full-text reproduced in accordance with the publisher's self-archiving policy.
Peer-Reviewed
Yes
Open Access status
openAccess
Accepted for publication
Institution
Department
Awarded
Embargo end date
Collections
Additional title
Abstract
Topoisomerase inhibitors are in common use as chemotherapeutic agents although they can display reduced efficacy in chemotherapy-resistant tumours, which have inactivated DNA damage response (DDR) genes, such as ATM and TP53. Here, we characterise the cellular response to the dual-acting agent, Alchemix (ALX), which is a modified anthraquinone that functions as a topoisomerase inhibitor as well as an alkylating agent. We show that ALX induces a robust DDR at nano-molar concentrations and this is mediated primarily through ATR- and DNA-PK- but not ATM-dependent pathways, despite DNA double strand breaks being generated after prolonged exposure to the drug. Interestingly, exposure of epithelial tumour cell lines to ALX in vitro resulted in potent activation of the G2/M checkpoint, which after a prolonged arrest, was bypassed allowing cells to progress into mitosis where they ultimately died by mitotic catastrophe. We also observed effective killing of lymphoid tumour cell lines in vitro following exposure to ALX, although, in contrast, this tended to occur via activation of a p53-independent apoptotic pathway. Lastly, we validate the effectiveness of ALX as a chemotherapeutic agent in vivo by demonstrating its ability to cause a significant reduction in tumour cell growth, irrespective of TP53 status, using a mouse leukaemia xenograft model. Taken together, these data demonstrate that ALX, through its dual action as an alkylating agent and topoisomerase inhibitor, represents a novel anti-cancer agent that could be potentially used clinically to treat refractory or relapsed tumours, particularly those harbouring mutations in DDR genes.
Version
Accepted manuscript
Citation
Thomas A, Perry T, Berhane S et al (2015) The dual-acting chemotherapeutic agent Alchemix induces cell death independently of ATM and p53. Oncogene. 34(25): 3336-3348.
Link to publisher’s version
Link to published version
Link to Version of Record
Type
Article