UDP glucuronosyltransferase 1A expression levels determine the response of colorectal cancer cells to the heat shock protein 90 inhibitor ganetespib

被引:0
|
作者
H Landmann
D A Proia
S He
L S Ogawa
F Kramer
T Beißbarth
M Grade
J Gaedcke
M Ghadimi
U Moll
M Dobbelstein
机构
[1] Göttingen Centre of Molecular Biosciences (GZMB),Department of Medical Statistics
[2] Institute of Molecular Oncology,Department of General
[3] Faculty of Medicine,Department of Pathology
[4] University of Göttingen,undefined
[5] Synta Pharmaceuticals Corp,undefined
[6] 45 Hartwell Avenue,undefined
[7] Lexington,undefined
[8] MA 02421,undefined
[9] USA,undefined
[10] University Medical Center Göttingen,undefined
[11] Visceral and Pediatric Surgery,undefined
[12] University Medical Center Göttingen,undefined
[13] School of Medicine,undefined
[14] Stony Brook University,undefined
来源
Cell Death & Disease | 2014年 / 5卷
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
HSP90 inhibition represents a promising route to cancer therapy, taking advantage of cancer cell-inherent proteotoxic stress. The HSP90-inhibitor ganetespib showed benefit in advanced clinical trials. This raises the need to identify the molecular determinants of treatment response. We tested the efficacy of ganetespib on a series of colorectal cancer (CRC)-derived cell lines and correlated their sensitivities with comprehensive gene expression analysis. Notably, the drug concentration required for 50% growth inhibition (IC50) varied up to 70-fold (from 36 to 2500 nM) between different cell lines. Correlating cell line-specific IC50s with the corresponding gene expression patterns revealed a strong association between ganetespib resistance (IC50>500 nM) and high expression of the UDP glucuronosyltransferase 1A (UGT1A) gene cluster. Moreover, CRC tumor samples showed a comparable distribution of UGT1A expression levels. The members of the UGT1A gene family are known as drug-conjugating liver enzymes involved in drug excretion, but their function in tumor cells is hardly understood. Chemically unrelated HSP90 inhibitors, for example, 17-N-allylamino-17-demethoxygeldanamycin (17-AAG), did not show correlation of drug sensitivities with UGT1A levels, whereas the ganetespib-related compound NVP-AUY922 did. When the most ganetespib-resistant cell line, HT29, was treated with ganetespib, the levels of HSP90 clients were unaffected. However, HT29 cells became sensitized to the drug, and HSP90 client proteins were destabilized by ganetespib upon siRNA-mediated UGT1A knockdown. Conversely, the most ganetespib-sensitive cell lines HCT116 and SW480 became more tolerant toward ganetespib upon UGT1A overexpression. Mechanistically, ganetespib was rapidly glucuronidated and excreted in resistant but not in sensitive CRC lines. We conclude that CRC cell-expressed UGT1A inactivates ganetespib and other resorcinolic Hsp90 inhibitors by glucuronidation, which renders the drugs unable to inhibit Hsp90 and thereby abrogates their biological activity. UGT1A levels in tumor tissues may be a suitable predictive biomarker to stratify CRC patients for ganetespib treatment.
引用
收藏
页码:e1411 / e1411
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Expression of Heat Shock Protein 90 in Testicular Cancer: A Retrospective Cohort Study
    Tzelepis, Konstantinos
    Giannakodimos, Ilias
    Politis, Vasileios
    Stamatiou, Konstantinos
    Provatas, Ioannis
    Mitakidi, Evangelia
    Tzortzis, Vasileios
    Sotiriou, Sotirios
    REVIEWS ON RECENT CLINICAL TRIALS, 2024,
  • [42] Significance of expression of heat shock protein90α in human gastric cancer
    Zuo, DS
    Dai, J
    Bo, AH
    Fan, J
    Xiao, XY
    WORLD JOURNAL OF GASTROENTEROLOGY, 2003, 9 (11) : 2616 - 2618
  • [43] Significance of expression of heat shock protein90α in human gastric cancer
    Dong-Sheng Zuo Ai-Hua Bo Jie Fan Xiu-Ying Xiao
    World Journal of Gastroenterology, 2003, 9 (11) : 2616 - 2618
  • [44] Impact of Heat shock protein 90 expression on outcomes of patients with gastric cancer
    Dote, Hideaki
    Nozaki, Isao
    Kobatake, Takaya
    Ohta, Kouzi
    Aogi, Kenjiro
    Kubo, Yoshiro
    Tanada, Minoru
    Kurita, Akira
    Yamamoto, Tamami
    Nishimura, Rieko
    Teramoto, Norihiro
    Iguchi, Harurou
    Takashima, Shigemitsu
    CANCER RESEARCH, 2009, 69
  • [45] UDP-Glucuronosyltransferase 1A Compromises Intracellular Accumulation and Anti-Cancer Effect of Tanshinone IIA in Human Colon Cancer Cells
    Liu, Miao
    Wang, Qiong
    Liu, Fang
    Cheng, Xuefang
    Wu, Xiaolan
    Wang, Hong
    Wu, Mengqiu
    Ma, Ying
    Wang, Guangji
    Hao, Haiping
    PLOS ONE, 2013, 8 (11):
  • [46] Apoptosis in response to heat stress is positively associated with heat-shock protein 90 expression in chicken myocardial cells in vitro
    Zhang, Xiao-Hui
    Wu, Hong
    Tang, Shu
    Li, Qiao-Ning
    Xu, Jiao
    Zhang, Miao
    Su, Ya-Nan
    Yin, Bin
    Zhao, Qi-Ling
    Kemper, Nicole
    Hartung, Joerg
    Bao, En-Dong
    JOURNAL OF VETERINARY SCIENCE, 2017, 18 (02) : 129 - 140
  • [47] Modulation of heat-shock protein 90 (HSP90) client protein expression in prostate cancer cells by a novel novobiocin analog
    Goetzl, MA
    Blagg, BS
    Cronk, B
    Neckers, L
    Holzbeierlein, JM
    JOURNAL OF UROLOGY, 2006, 175 (04): : 140 - 140
  • [48] Exogenous expression of heat shock protein 90kDa retards the cell cycle and impairs the heat shock response
    Zhao, C
    Hashiguchi, A
    Kondoh, K
    Du, WL
    Hata, J
    Yamada, T
    EXPERIMENTAL CELL RESEARCH, 2002, 275 (02) : 200 - 214
  • [49] Cloning of cytoplasmic heat shock protein 90 (FcHSP90) from Fenneropenaeus chinensis and its expression response to heat shock and hypoxia
    Fuhua Li
    Wei Luan
    Chengsong Zhang
    Jiquan Zhang
    Bing Wang
    Yusu Xie
    Shihao Li
    Jianhai Xiang
    Cell Stress and Chaperones, 2009, 14 : 161 - 172
  • [50] Cloning of cytoplasmic heat shock protein 90 (FcHSP90) from Fenneropenaeus chinensis and its expression response to heat shock and hypoxia
    Li, Fuhua
    Luan, Wei
    Zhang, Chengsong
    Zhang, Jiquan
    Wang, Bing
    Xie, Yusu
    Li, Shihao
    Xiang, Jianhai
    CELL STRESS & CHAPERONES, 2009, 14 (02): : 161 - 172