1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to the inhibition of tumor cell growth. More particularly, the invention relates to the inhibition of tumor cell growth through inhibition of the CDKI pathway.
2. Summary of the Related Art
Programmed cell cycle arrest occurs in a variety of physiological situations, such as damage response, growth factor depletion, contact inhibition, terminal differentiation of postmitotic cells, and senescence. Vidal and Koff, Gene 247: 1-15 (2000), teaches that all of these situations involve transient and/or permanent upregulation of cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor (CDKI) proteins. CDKIs induce cell cycle arrest by inhibiting cyclin/cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) complexes, which mediate transitions between different phases of the cell cycle. CDKI proteins belong to Cip/Kip or Ink4 protein families. Roninson, Cancer Letters 179: 1-14 (2002), teaches that the most pleiotropic of these proteins is p21Waf1/Cip1/Sdi1, which inhibits different cyclin/CDK complexes and plays a role in damage-induced checkpoint arrest, induction of senescence and terminal differentiation. Sharpless, Experimental Gerontology 39: 1751-1759 (2004) teaches that among the other CDKIs, the CDK4/6 inhibitor p16Ink4a, a tumor suppressor frequently inactivated in different cancers, has been implicated as the principal regulator of the maintenance of cell cycle arrest in senescent cells, whereas Vidal and Koff, supra, teaches that CDK2 inhibitor p27Kip1 is a key mediator of contact inhibition. Roninson, supra; Blagosklonny, Cell Cycle 1: 391-393 (2002); Blain et al., Cancer Cell 3: 111-115 (2003); and Weiss et al., Cancer Letters 189: 39-48 (2003), teach that tumor expression of several CDKI proteins, including p21, p27 and even p16, showed dual, both positive and negative, correlations with patient prognosis in several types of cancer. Martin-Caballero et al., Cancer Research 61: 6234-6238 (2001), teaches that, in animal studies, p21-null mice showed a higher frequency of spontaneous cancers but at the same time were resistant to radiation-induced carcinogenesis. Most strikingly, Blain et al., supra, and Weiss et al., supra, teach that inhibitors of p21 or p27 were found to inhibit tumor growth or drug resistance, and these CDKI were proposed as promising new targets for cancer therapeutics.
The surprising oncogenic associations of CDKI proteins have been explained through several types of experimental findings. LaBaer et al., Genes Dev. 11: 847-862 (1997), teaches that CDKI proteins act not only as inhibitors of cyclin/CDK complexes but also as potentiators of their assembly. Dotto, Biochimica et Biophysica Acta 1471: M43-M56 (2000), teaches that p21WAF1/Cip1 acts as an inhibitor of caspases and other apoptotic factors. Denicourt and Dowdy, Genes Dev. 18: 851-855 (2004), teaches that Cip/Kip proteins act as inhibitors of the invasion-suppressing Rho pathway, an activity specifically associated with cytoplasmic p27 or p21.
The most general pro-carcinogenic effect of CDKI proteins has emerged, however, from studies previously conducted by some of the instant inventors. This effect is transcriptional stimulation of multiple genes encoding different classes of secreted mitogenic, anti-apoptotic, angiogenic and pro-invasive factors, which results in paracrine tumor-promoting activity of CDKI-arrested cells. This insight came principally from cDNA microarray analysis of the effects of p21, which was expressed in a human fibrosarcoma cell line from an inducible promoter, as described in Chang et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 97: 4291-4296 (2000). This analysis showed that p21 produces significant changes in the expression of multiple genes. A large number of genes are strongly and rapidly inhibited by p21, and most of these genes are involved in cell proliferation, with the single largest category functioning in the process of mitosis. Zhu et al., Cell Cycle 1: 59-66 (2002), teaches that inhibition of cell cycle progression genes by p21 is mediated by negative cis-regulatory elements in the promoters of these genes, such as CDE/CHR. Chang et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 99: 389-394 (2002), teaches that the same genes are downregulated in tumor cells that undergo senescence after chemotherapeutic treatment, but p21 knockout prevents the inhibition of these genes in drug-treated cells. Hence, p21 is responsible for the inhibition of multiple cell cycle progression genes in response to DNA damage.
Chang et al., 2000, supra, teaches that another general effect of p21 induction is upregulation of genes, many of which encode transmembrane proteins, secreted proteins and extracellular matrix (ECM) components. Chang et al., 2002, supra, teaches that this effect of p21 is relatively slow, occurring subsequently to growth arrest and concurrently with the development of the morphological features of senescence. These genes are induced by DNA damage but p21 knockout decreases their induction. This decrease is only partial, which can be explained by recent findings that the majority of p21-inducible genes are also induced in response to other CDKI, p16 and p27 (see WO 03/073062). Gregory et al., Cell Cycle 1: 343-350 (2002) and Poole et al., Cell Cycle 3: 931-940 (2004), have reproduced gene upregulation by CDKI using promoter constructs of many different CDKI-inducible genes, indicating that it occurs at the level of transcription. Perkins et al., Science 275: 523-526 (1997); Gregory et al., supra and Poole et al., supra, teach that induction of transcription by p21 is mediated in part by transcription factor NFκB and transcription cofactors of the p300/CBP family. Unfortunately, other intermediates in the signal transduction pathway that leads to the activation of transcription in response to CDKI, the CDKI pathway, remain presently unknown.
Chang et al., 2000, supra, discusses medical significance of the CDKI pathway as indicated by the known functions of CDKI-inducible genes. Many CDKI-upregulated genes are associated with cell senescence and organism aging, including a group of genes implicated in age-related diseases and lifespan restriction. Migliaccio et al., Nature 402: 309-313 (1999), teaches that knockout of p66Shc, a mediator of oxidative stress, expands the lifespan of mice by about 30%. Other CDKI-induced genes play a role in several age-related diseases, including Alzheimer's disease, amyloidosis, atherosclerosis, arthritis, renal disease and viral diseases. Merched and Chan, Circulation 110: 3830-3841 (2004), teaches that p21-null mice are resistant to experimental induction of atherosclerosis. Al-Douahji et al., Kidney International 56: 1691-1699 (1999) and Megyesi et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 96: 10830-10835 (1999) teach that p21-null mice are resistant to experimental induction of chronic renal disease.
The strongest associations for CDKI-inducible genes, however, have been found in cancer. In particular, p21 expression activates the genes for many growth factors, inhibitors of apoptosis, angiogenic factors, and invasion-promoting proteases. In accordance with these changes in gene expression, Chang et al., 2000, supra teaches that p21-arrested tumor and normal cells show paracrine mitogenic and anti-apoptotic activities. Krtolica et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 98: 12072-12077 (2001) and Parrinello et al., J. Cell Science 118: 485-496 (2005), demonstrated paracrine tumor-promoting activities in vitro and in vivo, respectively, in CDKI-expressing normal senescent fibroblasts, which express p21 and p16. Importantly, senescent fibroblasts possess the characteristic pro-carcinogenic activity that has long been identified with tumor-associated stromal fibroblasts. Roninson, 2002, supra, teaches that all of the experimental treatments shown to endow fibroblasts with tumor-promoting paracrine activities also induce the CDKI, suggesting that the CDKI pathway could be the key mediator of the pro-carcinogenic activity of stromal fibroblasts. Castro et al., The Prostate 55: 30-38 (2003); Michaloglou et al., Nature 436: 720-724 (2005) and Collado et al., Nature 436: 642 (2005), teach that the CDKI pathway is also activated in various pre-malignant conditions characterized by the senescent phenotype. te Poele et al., Cancer Res. 62: 1876-1883 (2002) and Roberson et al., Cancer Res. 65: 2795-2803 (2005), teach that the CDKI pathway is also activated in tumors that frequently become senescent as a result of chemotherapy. Stein et al., Cancer Res. 64: 2805-2816 (2004), in a recent bioinformatics study, identified 13 genes, expression of which is associated with the most intractable cancers.
CDKI proteins interact with different members of the CDK family. Various CDKs have been identified, including CDK1, CDK2, CDK3, CDK5 and CDK4/CDK6. Previous cancer-related studies have focused on CDK1, CDK2 and CDK4/CDK6. CDK1, CDK2 and CDK4/CDK6 (the latter two CDKs are closely related to each other and interact with the same class of cyclins), have been used as targets for developing specific inhibitors, with potential anticancer activity. Among the known inhibitors of CDKs, some commercially available selective inhibitors of CDK1 (CGP74514A) (Calbiochem Cat. No. 217696), CDK2 (CVT-313) (Calbiochem Cat. No. 238803), and CDK4 (NSC 625987) (Calbiochem Cat. No. 219477) have been developed and tested, as has been a broad-specificity CDK inhibitor, flavopiridol.
In contrast, CDK3 has not been used as a target for developing selective inhibitors. Meyerson et al., EMBO J. 11, 2909-2917 (1992) reports that CDK3 was discovered in the early 1990s, along with other related members of the CDK protein family. Human CDK3 protein comprises 305 amino acids; it shares 76% amino acid identity with CDK2 and 67% identity with CDK1/CDC2. Hofmann and Livingston, Genes Dev. 10, 851-861 (1996) teaches that CDK3 protein binds to E2F1 transcription factor, which is involved in G1/S transition. van den Heuvel and Harlow, Science 262, 2050-2054 (1993) teaches that a dominant-negative mutant of CDK3 induces G1 cell cycle arrest in mammalian cells. Meikrantz and Schlegel, J. Biol. Chem. 271, 10205-10209 (1996) teaches that such a dominant-negative mutant suppresses apoptosis. On the other hand, Park et al., J. Neurosci. 17, 8975-8983 (1997) teaches that a CDK3 mutant failed to inhibit apoptosis of neural cells, and Braun et al., Cell Biol. 17, 789-798 (1998) teaches that overexpression of CDK3 sensitizes mammalian cells to Myc-induced apoptosis. Interestingly, Braun et al., Oncogene 17, 2259-2269 (1998) teaches that CDK3 had no oncogenic activity and did not enhance c-Myc's transformation potential of rat embryo fibroblasts, but that high levels of CDK3 (but not CDK2) enhanced Myc-induced proliferation and anchorage-independent growth in Rat-1 cells. More recently, Ren and Rollins, Cell 117, 239-251 (2004) teaches that the complex of CDK3 with Cyclin C mediates the exit of mammalian cells from G0 state (quiescence) into G1 stage of the cell cycle.
Despite these reports, there have been strikingly fewer studies on CDK3 than on other CDK proteins. Among the possible reasons for this surprising lack of CDK3 studies may be that the most commonly used laboratory strains of mice do not express CDK3 due to a germline mutation in this gene (Ye et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A 98, 1682-1686 (2001)), and that CDK3 is expressed at exceedingly low levels in all human tissues. Perhaps in part as a result of this, CDK3 has not been pursued as a potential target for anticancer drugs and no selective inhibitors of CDK3 have been previously developed.
There is a need for inhibitors of the CDKI pathway. There is also a need for novel CDK inhibitors with selectivity for cancer cells.
The present inventors have identified several compounds with the following CDK-related activity. These compounds inhibit the CDKI pathway, defined as the induction of transcription of multiple genes in response to the expression of a CDK inhibitor protein, such as p21Waf1. These CDKI pathway inhibitors, designated SNX9 class compounds, also have a desirable ability to inhibit the growth of different types of tumor cells preferentially to normal cells.
The invention provides new methods for specifically inhibiting tumor cell growth. The invention further provides new and specific inhibitors of tumor cell growth, as well as means for discovery of additional such inhibitors. The present inventors have surprisingly discovered that Cyclin-Dependent Kinase 3 (CDK3) is specifically required for tumor cell growth, in contrast to other members of the CDK family.
In a first aspect, the invention provides a method for selectively inhibiting tumor cell growth comprising selectively inhibiting in a tumor cell cyclin-dependent kinase 3 (CDK3).
In a second aspect, the invention provides a method for identifying a specific inhibitor of tumor cell growth, the method comprising contacting an in vitro complex of a purified cyclin and CDK3 under conditions in which the complex of purified cyclin and CDK3 is capable of exhibiting kinase activity with a candidate inhibitor of such activity, and measuring the kinase activity of such complex in the presence or absence of such candidate compound.
In a third aspect, the method provides specific inhibitor compounds of CDK3, including compounds identified by the method according to the second aspect of the invention.
In a fourth aspect, the invention provides a method for treating a patient having a tumor with compounds that inhibit the induction of transcription by cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors. The method according to this aspect of the invention comprises administering to a patient having a tumor a compound according to the invention.
In a fifth aspect, the invention provides a method for inhibiting the Cyclin-Dependent Kinase Inhibitor (CDKI) pathway downstream of the CDKI proteins and upstream of genes that are transcriptionally activated by the CDKI pathway. This method may have a variety of clinical applications in chemoprevention and therapy of different age-related diseases.
As a practical measure of the method according to this aspect of the invention, the method should not inhibit the essential tumor-suppressive role of CDKI proteins, nor should it directly inhibit the function of proteins encoded by genes that are transcriptionally activated by the CDKI pathway. However, inhibition of transcription of genes that are transcriptionally activated by the CDKI pathway is not regarded as direct inhibition of the function of proteins encoded by genes that are transcriptionally activated by the CDKI pathway.
The present inventors have identified several compounds with the following CDK-related activity. These compounds inhibit the CDKI pathway, defined as the induction of transcription of multiple genes in response to the expression of a CDK inhibitor protein, such as p21Waf1. The CDKI pathway inhibitors, designated SNX9 class compounds, have a desirable ability to inhibit the growth of different types of tumor cells preferentially to normal cells.
The invention provides new methods for specifically inhibiting tumor cell growth. The invention further provides new and specific inhibitors of tumor cell growth, as well as means for discovery of additional such inhibitors. The present inventors have surprisingly discovered that Cyclin-Dependent Kinase 3 (CDK3) is specifically required for tumor cell growth, in contrast to other members of the CDK family.
The references cited herein reflect the level of knowledge in the field and are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety. Any conflicts between the teachings of the cited references and this specification shall be resolved in favor of the latter.
In a first aspect, the invention provides a method for selectively inhibiting tumor cell growth comprising selectively inhibiting in a tumor cell cyclin-dependent kinase 3 (CDK3). For purposes of the invention, “selectively inhibiting tumor cell growth” means inhibiting the growth of fully transformed or partially transformed cells, relative to untransformed cells. “Selectively inhibiting CDK3” means inhibiting CDK3 to a greater extent than inhibiting other cyclin dependent kinases (CDKs), including CDK1, CDK2, and CDK4/CDK6. “Inhibiting a cyclin dependent kinase (CDK)” means reducing the activity and/or expression of a CDK. Preferred methods of inhibiting CDK3 include, without limitation, contacting CDK3 (preferably in a tumor cell) with a small molecule inhibitor of CDK3 activity, or a dominant negative mutant of CDK3, such as a CDK3 protein with some but not all of its protein- or substrate-interactive domains inactivated or a genetic suppressor element (GSE) that encodes a fragment of the CDK3 protein, which interferes with the CDK3 activity. A preferred small molecule specific inhibitor of CDK3 is an SNX9 class compound. Contacting CDK3 with its dominant negative mutant includes expressing the dominant negative mutant via transfection with a virus or a vector expressing the dominant negative mutant, or contacting CDK3-expressing cells with a peptide encoded by the GSE. Additional preferred methods include contacting a cell with an inhibitor of CDK3 gene expression, including without limitation, a short hairpin RNA (shRNA), a small inhibitory RNA (siRNA), an antisense nucleic acid (AS) and a ribozyme. “Contacting a cell with an inhibitor of CDK3 gene expression” includes exogenously providing to a cell an inhibitor of CDK3 gene expression, as well as expressing an inhibitor of CDK3 gene expression in a cell. Expressing an inhibitor of gene expression in a cell is conveniently provided by transfection with a virus or a vector expressing such an inhibitor.
In a second aspect, the invention provides a method for identifying a specific inhibitor of tumor cell growth, the method comprising contacting an in vitro complex of a purified cyclin and CDK3 under conditions in which the complex of purified cyclin and CDK3 is capable of exhibiting kinase activity with a candidate inhibitor of such activity, and measuring the kinase activity of such complex in the presence or absence of such candidate compound. According to this aspect of the invention, a complex of a CDK3-interacting cyclin or cyclin-related molecule, such as cyclin E, cyclin C, cyclin A or CABLES1 and CDK3 is used. For comparison (control) experiments, a complex of CDK1, CDK2, CDK4 or CDK6 with a cyclin interacting with the corresponding CDK is used. A candidate compound is regarded as a specific inhibitor of tumor cell growth if (1) the activity of a cyclin/CDK3 complex in the presence of the candidate inhibitor is lower than the kinase activity of the cyclin/CDK3 complex in the absence of the candidate inhibitor, and preferably if (2) the candidate inhibitor inhibits the activity of a cyclin/CDK3 complex to a greater extent than the kinase activity of a complex of CDK1, CDK2, CDK4, or CDK6 with a cyclin interacting with the corresponding CDK. “The absence of the candidate inhibitor” means that either no small molecule CDK inhibitor is present, or a CDK inhibitor which is known to not be an inhibitor of a CDK is present. As a positive control, the inhibitory activity of the candidate inhibitor may be compared with the inhibitory activity of a known specific inhibitor of CDK3, such as an SNX9 class compound.
In a third aspect, the method provides specific inhibitor compounds of CDK3, including such compounds identified by the method according to the second aspect of the invention.
Some preferred compounds according to the invention have the structure I:
including free acids, salts, or prodrugs thereof;
wherein R1, R2 and R3 are each independently selected from hydrogen, C1-C6 alkyl, cycloalkyl, alkenyl, O-alkyl, dialkylaminoalkyl, aryl and heteroaryl, or R2 and R3 may together form a ring of 3-6 atoms, which may include one or more heteroatom and/or 1 or more double bond; A and B are each independently selected from hydrogen, O-alkyl, N-alkyl, and an electron-withdrawing group, provided, however, that at least one of A or B is an electron withdrawing group; and Z is a 4-10 atom ring structure, which may contain 0-3 heteroatoms, and may contain 1 or more double bonds.
Some preferred compounds according to the invention have the structure II:
including free acids, salts, or prodrugs thereof;
wherein R1, R2 and R3 are each independently selected from hydrogen, C1-C6 alkyl, cycloalkyl, alkenyl, O-alkyl, dialkylaminoalkyl, aryl and heteroaryl, or R2 and R3 may together form a ring of 3-6 atoms, which may include one or more heteroatom and/or 1 or more double bond; and A and B are each independently selected from hydrogen, O-alkyl, N-alkyl and an electron-withdrawing group, provided, however, that at least one of A or B is an electron withdrawing group.
In some preferred embodiments of structures I and II, R1 is hydrogen or methyl, and R2 and R3 are independently selected from hydrogen, methyl and C2-C6 alkyl or alkenyl.
In some preferred embodiments, one or more electron-withdrawing group may be selected from halogen, a nitrogen-containing group, or an oxygen-containing group. In some preferred embodiments, one or more halogen is not fluorine, and may be preferably selected from chlorine and bromine.
In some preferred embodiments, the compound used in the methods according to the invention is selected from:
including free acids, salts or prodrugs thereof.
In a fourth aspect, the invention provides a method for treating a patient having a tumor with compounds that reduce or prevent the induction of transcription by cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors. The method according to this aspect of the invention comprises administering to a patient having a tumor a compound according to the invention. Cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors (CDKI) induce transcription of genes through the formation of a complex between a cyclin, a cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) and the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor (e.g., p21, p16, p27). Compounds that reduce or prevent CDKI induced transcription act by interfering with such complex formation, destabilizing the complex, or otherwise rendering the complex inoperative. Some compounds that selectively interfere with tumor cell growth act directly on CDK3.
In a fifth aspect, the invention provides a method for inhibiting the Cyclin-Dependent Kinase Inhibitor (CDKI) pathway downstream of the CDKI proteins and upstream of genes that are transcriptionally activated by the CDKI pathway. This method may have a variety of clinical applications in chemoprevention and therapy of different age-related diseases. In preferred embodiments, the method according to the invention comprises contacting a cell with a small molecule inhibitor having the structure (I) or (II).
In the methods for treatment according to the invention, the compounds and other inhibitors described above may be incorporated into a pharmaceutical formulation. Such formulations comprise the compound, which may be in the form of a free acid, salt or prodrug, in a pharmaceutically acceptable diluent, carrier, or excipient. Such formulations are well known in the art and are described, e.g., in Remington's Pharmaceutical Sciences, 18th Edition, ed. A. Gennaro, Mack Publishing Co., Easton, Pa., 1990.
The characteristics of the carrier will depend on the route of administration. As used herein, the term “pharmaceutically acceptable” means a non-toxic material that is compatible with a biological system such as a cell, cell culture, tissue, or organism, and that does not interfere with the effectiveness of the biological activity of the active ingredient(s). Thus, compositions according to the invention may contain, in addition to the inhibitor, diluents, fillers, salts, buffers, stabilizers, solubilizers, and other materials well known in the art.
As used herein, the term “pharmaceutically acceptable salts” refers to salts that retain the desired biological activity of the above-identified compounds and exhibit minimal or no undesired toxicological effects. Examples of such salts include, but are not limited to, salts formed with inorganic acids (for example, hydrochloric acid, hydrobromic acid, sulfuric acid, phosphoric acid, nitric acid, and the like), and salts formed with organic acids such as acetic acid, oxalic acid, tartaric acid, succinic acid, malic acid, ascorbic acid, benzoic acid, tannic acid, palmoic acid, alginic acid, polyglutamic acid, naphthalenesulfonic acid, naphthalenedisulfonic acid, methanesulfonic acid, p-toluenesulfonic acid, polygalacturonic acid, and the like. The compounds can also be administered as pharmaceutically acceptable quaternary salts known by those skilled in the art, which specifically include the quaternary ammonium salt of the formula —NR+Z-, wherein R is hydrogen, alkyl, or benzyl, and Z is a counterion, including chloride, bromide, iodide, —O-alkyl, toluenesulfonate, methylsulfonate, sulfonate, phosphate, or carboxylate (such as benzoate, succinate, acetate, glycolate, maleate, malate, citrate, tartrate, ascorbate, benzoate, cinnamoate, mandeloate, benzyloate, and diphenylacetate).
The active compound is included in the pharmaceutically acceptable carrier or diluent in an amount sufficient to deliver to a patient a therapeutically effective amount without causing serious toxic effects in the patient treated. The effective dosage range of the pharmaceutically acceptable derivatives can be calculated based on the weight of the parent compound to be delivered. If the derivative exhibits activity in itself, the effective dosage can be estimated as above using the weight of the derivative, or by other means known to those skilled in the art.
Administration of the pharmaceutical formulations in the methods according to the invention may be by any medically accepted route, including, without limitation, parenteral, oral, sublingual, transdermal, topical, intranasal, intratracheal, or intrarectal. In certain preferred embodiments, compositions of the invention are administered parenterally, e.g., intravenously in a hospital setting. In certain other preferred embodiments, administration may preferably be by the oral route.
The following examples are intended to further illustrate certain particularly preferred embodiments of the invention and are not intended to limit the scope of the invention.
As described in a co-pending patent application PCT/US06/0 1046, we have developed a high-throughput screening (HTS) procedure for compounds inhibiting the CDKI pathway. This procedure utilizes a highly sensitive reporter cell line that was generated by infecting HT1080 p21-9 cells, a derivative of HT1080 fibrosarcoma cells that express p21 from a promoter induced by a physiologically neutral β-galactoside IPTG (isopropyl-β-thio-galactoside) with a lentiviral vector that expresses Green Fluorescent Protein (GFP) from the CDKI-inducible cytomegalovirus (CMV) promoter, followed by subcloning of GFP positive cells and monitoring the induction of GFP expression by IPTG. A cell line showing approximately 10-fold increase in GFP upon the addition of IPTG was used for HTS in a 96-well format.
This reporter line was used to screen two diversified small-molecule libraries developed by ChemBridge Corp., Microformat 04 and DiverSet, each comprising 50,000 compounds. These diversified libraries were rationally chosen by ChemBridge by quantifying pharmacophores in a collection of >500,000 drug-like molecules, using a version of Chem-X software to maximize the pharmacophore diversity. The Microformat 04 collection was designed to complement the chemical space covered by the older DiverSet library. ChemBridge libraries have been successfully used by numerous industrial and academic researchers, in a variety of cell-based and cell-free assays. The ChemBridge libraries were screened at 20 μM concentration, a conventional concentration for cell-based screening of these libraries. 62 of 100,000 ChemBridge compounds were identified by HTS and verified as inhibiting the induction of CMV-GFP expression in response to p21. This low hit rate (0.06%) indicates a high selectivity of our assay. SNX9, SNX9-1 and compounds 3-4, specifically shown above, showed anti-CDKI pathway activity in the reporter assay.
We determined whether this class of compounds inhibits the effect of CDKI not only on artificial promoter-reporter constructs but also on CDKI-responsive endogenous genes. For this purpose, we developed real-time RT-PCR (Q-PCR) assays for measuring RNA levels of eleven CDKI-responsive genes. This assay uses a 96-well TurboCapture RNA extraction kit (Qiagen), in which oligo(dT) is covalently bound to the surface of the wells to allow mRNA isolation from cell lysate and cDNA synthesis in the same wells. 5 units/μl of SuperScript III reverse transcriptase (Invitrogen) was added to the wells for 1 hr for cDNA synthesis at 50° C., and 2 μl of the resulting cDNA was then used for Q-PCR analysis using SYBR Green PCR Master Mix (ABI) with ABI 7900HT Q-PCR machine. Primers used to amplify specific gene products for the corresponding genes and for β-actin (control) are listed in Table 1.
We also tested if these compounds could act as the inhibitors of NFκB, by measuring cellular levels of p50 or p65 subunits binding oligonucleotides containing NFκB consensus binding site, using ACTIVE MOTIF TransAM™ NFκB p65 Chemi and NFκB p50 Chemi Transcription Factor Assay Kits. As shown in
Surprisingly, the majority of 62 compounds identified in the screen for CDKI pathway inhibitors showed pronounced growth inhibition of the HT1080-derived reporter cell line. In the case of SNX9, SNX9-1 and Compounds 3 and 4, cell growth inhibition was associated with the induction of both cell death (as detected microscopically by cell detachment) and cell cycle arrest. The latter is illustrated in
We have compared the growth-inhibitory effects of SNX9-class compounds on different tumor and normal cells.
These results demonstrate that SNX9-class compounds exhibit the essential effect expected for CDKI pathway inhibitors, blocking the induction and reversing CDKI-induced transcription, and also show pronounced tumor-specific growth-inhibitory activity. SNX9-class compounds therefore constitute prototypes of drugs that are likely to be useful for chemoprevention and therapy of cancer.
HT1080 p21-9 cell line, which carries IPTG-inducible CDKI p21, was either untreated, or treated for 72 hrs with 100 μM IPTG (which induces p21), or with CDKI pathway inhibitors SNX9-1 (20 μM, SNX9 family) or SNX14 (80 μM, unrelated to SNX9) alone or in combination with IPTG. RNA was extracted after each treatment and used for hybridization with Affymetrix U133 2.0 Plus microarrays, containing 56,000 probe sets corresponding to essentially all the human genes. The microarray data were analyzed using Gene Spring software (Agilent).
In particular, we found that 9 of 14 genes, identified by Stein et al., supra, as markers of cancer intractability were induced by p21 in this system, but SNX9-1 and SNX14 inhibited their induction (Table 2). This result indicates potential utility of CDKI pathway inhibitors for diminishing cancer intractability.
The right panels of
This finding suggested the following hypothesis (
To test the above hypothesis, we determined whether several CDKI pathway inhibitors, including two SNX9 class compounds (SNX9 and SNX9-1), two compounds of a different structural class (SNX14 and SNX2) and another unrelated inhibitor (SNX35), inhibit the kinase activity of different complexes formed in vitro by purified cyclin/CDK complexes. This analysis was carried out as a service by Upstate Biotechnology, Inc.
CDK1/cyclinB (h)
In a final reaction volume of 25 μl, CDK1/cyclinB (h) (5-10 μU) is incubated with 8 mM MOPS pH 7.0, 0.2 mM EDTA, 0.1 mg/ml histone H1, 10 mM MgAcetate and [γ-33P-ATP] (specific activity approx. 500 cpm/pmol, 45 μM concentration). The reaction is initiated by the addition of the MgATP mix. After incubation for 40 minutes at room temperature, the reaction is stopped by the addition of 5 μl of a 3% phosphoric acid solution. 10 μl of the reaction is then spotted onto a P30 filtermat and washed three times for 5 minutes in 75 mM phosphoric acid and once in methanol prior to drying and scintillation counting.
CDK2/cyclinA (h)
In a final reaction volume of 25 μl, CDK2/cyclinA (h) (5-10 mU) is incubated with 8 mM MOPS pH 7.0, 0.2 mM EDTA, 0.1 mg/ml histone H1, 10 mM MgAcetate and [γ-33P-ATP] (specific activity approx. 500 cpm/pmol, 45 μM concentration). The reaction is initiated by the addition of the MgATP mix. After incubation for 40 minutes at room temperature, the reaction is stopped by the addition of 5 μl of a 3% phosphoric acid solution. 10 μl of the reaction is then spotted onto a P30 filtermat and washed three times for 5 minutes in 75 mM phosphoric acid and once in methanol prior to drying and scintillation counting.
CDK2/cyclinE (h)
In a final reaction volume of 25 μl, CDK2/cyclinE (h) (5-10 mU) is incubated with 8 mM MOPS pH 7.0, 0.2 mM EDTA, 0.1 mg/ml histone H1, 10 mM MgAcetate and [γ-33P-ATP] (specific activity approx. 500 cpm/pmol, 120 μM concentration). The reaction is initiated by the addition of the MgATP mix. After incubation for 40 minutes at room temperature, the reaction is stopped by the addition of 5 μl of a 3% phosphoric acid solution. 10 μl of the reaction is then spotted onto a P30 filtermat and washed three times for 5 minutes in 75 mM phosphoric acid and once in methanol prior to drying and scintillation counting.
CDK3/cyclinE (h)
In a final reaction volume of 25 μl, CDK3/cyclinE (h) (5-10 mU) is incubated with 8 mM MOPS pH 7.0, 0.2 mM EDTA, 0.1 mg/ml H1, 10 mM MgAcetate and [γ-33P-ATP] (specific activity approx. 500 cpm/pmol, 200 μM concentration). The reaction is initiated by the addition of the MgATP mix. After incubation for 40 minutes at room temperature, the reaction is stopped by the addition of 5 μl of a 3% phosphoric acid solution. 10 μl of the reaction is then spotted onto a P30 filtermat and washed three times for 5 minutes in 75 mM phosphoric acid and once in methanol prior to drying and scintillation counting.
CDK6/cyclinD3 (h)
In a final reaction volume of 25 μl, CDK6/cyclinD3 (h) (5-10 mU) is incubated with 8 mM MOPS pH 7.0, 0.2 mm EDTA, 0.1 mg/ml H1, 10 mM MgAcetate and [γ-33P-ATP] (specific activity approx. 500 cpm/pmol, 200 μM concentration). The reaction is initiated by the addition of the MgATP mix. After incubation for 40 minutes at room temperature, the reaction is stopped by the addition of 5 μl of a 3% phosphoric acid solution. 10 μl of the reaction is then spotted onto a P30 filtermat and washed three times for 5 minutes in 75 mM phosphoric acid and once in methanol prior to drying and scintillation counting.
At the first step, all the compounds were tested at 100 μM concentration. At the second step, Cyclin/CDK complexes that showed significant sensitivity to the compounds were re-tested with two lower compound concentrations (20 and 40 μM for SNX9 and SNX2, 10 and 20 μM for more potent compounds SNX9-1 and SNX14).
We have previously demonstrated that SNX9 class compounds preferentially inhibit the growth of many different tumor cell lines relative to normal cells (human fibroblasts and normal mammary epithelial cells). To determine if tumor-specific growth inhibitory activity of SNX9 class compounds could be due to the inhibition of a specific CDK, we took advantage of the availability of selective inhibitors for some of the CDK proteins. Among these enzymes, CDK1, CDK2 and CDK4/CDK6 (the latter two CDKs are closely related to each other and interact with the same class of cyclins), have been used as targets for developing specific inhibitors, with potential anticancer activity. In contrast, CDK3 has not been used as a target for developing selective inhibitors. We have obtained commercially available selective inhibitors of CDK1 (CGP74514A) (Calbiochem Cat. No. 217696), CDK2 (CVT-313) (Calbiochem Cat. No. 238803), and CDK4 (NSC 625987) (Calbiochem Cat. No. 219477), and tested them, along with a broad-specificity CDK inhibitor flavopiridol, and with SNX14, SNX9 and SNX9-1, for growth inhibition of normal and transformed fibroblasts.
This analysis was done using a set of three isogenic human fibroblast cell lines with increasing degrees of neoplastic transformation (immortal but untransformed, partially transformed, and fully transformed). The dose-dependent growth inhibition assays were carried out in 96-well plates, in triplicate; the plated cell numbers for each cell line were determined in preliminary experiments to assure exponential growth over the 3-day period of the assay. The cell numbers were measured by staining DNA of attached cells with Hoechst 33342, and the dose dependent decrease in cell number was expressed relative to untreated cells. As shown in
In order to explore SNX9-unrelated specific inhibitors of CDK3, we chose to use recombinant lentiviral vectors that express short hairpin RNA (shRNA) sequences that inhibit CDK3 expression through the RNA interference (RNAi) mechanism. Three lentiviral vectors with different shRNA sequences targeting CDK3 were obtained from Open Biosystems, Huntsville, Ala. These vectors are comprised of pLKO1 backbone (www.openbiosystems.com), which carries a selectable marker for puromycin resistance and expresses shRNA inserts from the human U6 promoter. CDK3-targeting shRNA sequences are listed in Table 3.
In most experiments, we have used a mixture of all three CDK3-targeting lentiviral vectors, to maximize the efficacy of RNAi. As a negative control, we used either an insert-free pLKO1 virus or another insert-free lentiviral vector, LLCEPTu6X, derived from pLL3.7 (Rubinson et al., Nat. Genet. 33, 401-406 (2003) and also carrying a puromycin-resistance marker. To demonstrate that the mixture of three CDK3-targeting lentiviral vectors inhibits CDK3 RNA expression, the virus was prepared by co-transfection of three shRNA vectors with ViraPower lentiviral packaging mix into 293FT cells (Invitrogen), and packaged virus was transduced into HT1080 cells. Cells infected with shRNA-expressing or control virus were selected with 2 μg/ml puromycin for 3 days, and their poly(A)+RNA was purified using Oligotex Direct MRNA kit, Qiagen. As an additional control, RNA was extracted from uninfected and unselected cells. The RNA preparations were then tested by real-time reverse transcription-PCR (Q-PCR) for a decrease in the level of CDK3 mRNA. Q-PCR analysis was carried out using SYBR Green PCR Master Mix (ABI) with ABI 7900HT Q-PCR machine, in triplicate. Serial cDNA dilutions and gel electrophoresis were used for primer validation, and the comparative CT method for relative quantitation of gene expression (Applied Biosystems) was used to determine expression levels. The following PCR primers were used for CDK3: GCCCCCGAGATTCTCTTGG (sense) and GGAAACAGGGCTTTTCGA (antisense); these primers produce a 103 bp PCR product. As a normalization control, β-actin sequences were amplified using the following PCR primers:
CTTCCTGGGCATGGAGTC (sense) and TGTTGGCGTACAGGTCTTTG (antisense), yielding a 95-bp fragment.
The effects of the CDK3-targeting lentiviral mixture on the growth of normal and tumor cells was determined by using this mixture and the control insert-free virus to infect two tumor cell lines, HT1080 fibrosarcoma and HCT116 colon carcinoma, which we previously found to be highly susceptible to SNX9 class compounds and immortalized normal BJ-EN fibroblasts, which are relatively more resistant to SNX9 class compounds (
Male NCr nude mice, aged approximately 6-8 weeks were used for the study, which was carried out as a service by Taconic Biotechnology, Rensselaer, N.Y. Animals were maintained under virus free barrier conditions with continuous health monitoring. The administration of test materials, all data collection and disposal of study animals was in compliance with all relevant Taconic Biotechnology Standard Operating Procedures as well as The Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals. Study animals were observed upon arrival and daily throughout the study for overall health, behavior and morbidity. Test animals were subject to body weight measurement to determine dosage volumes of test articles.
The initial part of this analysis was a Range Finder Study, designed to evaluate acute toxicity and to identify the maximum tolerated dose (MTD) for therapeutic study. The Range Finder Study was performed twice. For the first iteration, 30 mice were injected intravenously with SNX9 and SNX9-1 in groups of 3 with phosphate buffered saline (PBS) only, 2.2 mg/kg SNX9, 4.4 mg/kg SNX9 8.8 mg/kg SNX9, 17.6 mg/kg SNX9, 80% PBS: 20% DMSO, 2.2 mg/kg SNX9-1, 4.4 mg/kg SNX9-1 8.8 mg/kg SNX9-1, 17.6 mg/kg SNX9-1. SNX9 was dissolved in PBS and SNX9-1 was dissolved in 80% PBS:20% DMSO. The volume injected per animal was approximately 0.1 ml/injection. One animal died on day one in the 2.2 mg/kg SNX9-1 (lowest dose) group, apparently due to shock. All other animals appeared healthy and thrived for the duration of the 3 day period of observation, and their general health and body weight were assessed. For all the mice, there was no significant weight change (see Table 4). At the end of the 3 day observation period all the mice were euthanized and a terminal blood sample was collected via cardiac puncture. These blood samples were analyzed for complete blood count evaluation. As shown in Table 4, the White Blood Cell count was in each case within the reference range, indicating neither SNX9 nor SNX9-1 had a detectable impact on White Blood Cell count even at the highest dose. A slight elevation of Red Blood Cell count was detected in approximately half of the groups, although this elevation was less than a 7% increase above the upper reference range and was not considered significant. All other blood count categories placed within the reference range.
For the second iteration, 24 mice were injected intravenously with SNX9 and SNX9-1 in groups of 3 with PBS only, 17.6 mg/kg SNX9, 35.2 mg/kg SNX9, 70.4 mg/kg SNX9, 80% PBS:20% DMSO, 17 mg/kg SNX9-1, 35.2 mg/kg SNX9-1, 70.4 mg/kg SNX9-1. One animal died shortly after dosing in the 70.4 mg/kg SNX9 group; this rapid death was likely due to shock and not compound toxicity. All other animals were healthy for the duration of the 3 day period during which the animals were observed and their general health and body weight were assessed. For all the mice, there was no significant weight change (see Table 4). The average beginning weight for the mice in the second iteration was 23.7 g±1.73. After the 3 day observation period all the mice were euthanized and a terminal blood sample was collected via cardiac puncture. These blood samples were analyzed for complete blood count evaluation. As in the first iteration, the White Blood Cell count was in each case within the reference range (Table 4), indicating that neither SNX9 nor SNX9-1 had a detectable impact on White Blood Cell count, even at the highest dose injected. A slight elevation of Red Blood Cell count was detected in approximately 7 out of eight of the groups, although this elevation was less than a 6% increase above the upper reference range and was not considered significant. All other blood count categories placed within the reference range.
The complete lack of toxicity of SNX9 and SNX9-1 in the Range Finder Study raised a question whether these compounds could be very rapidly lost from the bloodstream. In order to determine the ability of SNX9 to remain in the blood of mice at detectable levels, we analyzed its plasma level one hour after IV injection. Two control mice were uninjected, and two mice were injected IV with 70 mg/kg SNX9 (dissolved in PBS). After one hour, the mice were euthanized and the blood collected by cardiac puncture. After plasma was prepared from the whole blood it was frozen and stored at −70° C. The frozen plasma was thawed and 100 μl was cleared of plasma protein by precipitation with 4 volumes of 100% ethanol at −20° C. for one hour. Under these conditions, SNX9 is recovered quantitatively in the ethanol soluble fraction with a minimum of plasma contamination.
The first assay was HPLC analysis. For this assay, the ethanol soluble fraction was dried under vacuum and re-dissolved in 100 μl 30% acetonitrile 0.1% trifluoroacetic acid (TFA). 4 μl of the ethanol extracted SNX9 was applied to a C18 HPLC column and eluted isocratically using a buffer of 30% acetonitrile 0.1% TFA at a flow rate of 0.3 ml/min. The elution of SNX9 was monitored at its absorption maximum wavelength of 280 nm. Standards were prepared in a like fashion from control plasma spiked with SNX9 at the concentrations of 0 μM, 250 μM, 500 μM, 1 mM and 2 mM. These standards gave a characteristic absorption peak at 280 nm, eluting at approximately 5.5 minutes. The area under each standard peak was proportional to the concentration of SNX9 in the original plasma. In this way the concentration of SNX9 in the plasma of two injected mice was estimated to be close to 250 μM (data not shown).
The second assay was a biological test for cytotoxicity. In this assay, the ethanol soluble fraction was dissolved in DMEM containing 10% Fetal Calf Serum. Standards were prepared from control plasma that was spiked with 1 mM SNX9. The mouse-derived samples were then diluted into DMEM containing 10% Fetal Calf Serum identically to the standard 1 μM sample. These initial dilutions were then serially diluted to 12.5 μM, 6.25 μM, 3.12 μM, 1.56 μM, 0.78 μM, 0.39 μM, 0.195 μM, 0.097 μM, 0.048 μM, 0.024 μM and zero. The sample from the SNX9 injected animal was treated as if the concentration was 1 mM SNX9 in order to normalize for background plasma effects. These control and experimental dilutions were then applied to HT1080 cells seeded at 2000 cells per well of a 96 well tissue culture plate, in triplicate. After 72 hours the growth inhibition was measured by Hoechst staining of the cell lysate in each well of the 96 well tissue culture plate, prepared as previously described. A similar growth inhibition profile was observed in the experimental sample derived from the plasma of mice injected with 70 mg/kg SNX9 and the control plasma with spiked SNX9 at 1 mM (data not shown). From the above assays, we concluded that the active concentration of SNX9 in the plasma of mice injected IV with 70 mg/kg of the compound was between 250 μM and 1 mM, and the lack of toxicity was not due to the immediate loss of the compound from the bloodstream.
With this information, we then carried out the Therapeutic Dose Study of SNX9 and SNX9-1, in nude mice bearing established human colon (HCT116) cancer xenografts. HCT116 was from American Type Culture Collection (ATCC); ATCC information was referenced for the cryopreservation and growing of the cells. The cells were injected at 5×106 subcutaneously in the intra-scapular region. The tumor dimensions were measured using vernier calipers. To approximate the subcutaneous tumor size, the calipers were compressed on the skin slightly but not so tightly as to grip the subcutaneous mass. The maximal dimension of the tumor was recorded as L. The dimension perpendicular to L was recorded as W. The formula: Volume=0.5*L*W2 was used. Eight days following tumor cell injection into the intra-scapular region, when all the tumor inoculi became palpable, groups of 10 mice were treated for 21 days with PBS (control), SNX9 or SNX9-1 (each at 70 mg/kg), dissolved as in the Range Finder Study.
The compounds were injected intra-tumorally three times a week, on alternating days, for a total of 9 injections per animal over three weeks. Mice were sacrificed when tumor size exceeded 2000 mm3.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/747,220, filed May 15, 2006 and U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/849,968, filed Oct. 6, 2006. The entire teachings of the above-referenced Application are incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60747220 | May 2006 | US | |
60849968 | Oct 2006 | US |