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Actionable cancer vulnerability due to translational arrest, p53 aggregation and ribosome biogenesis stress evoked by the disulfiram metabolite CuET

Drug repurposing is a versatile strategy to improve current therapies. Disulfiram has long been used in the treatment of alcohol dependency and multiple clinical trials to evaluate its clinical value in oncology are ongoing. We have recently reported that the disulfiram metabolite diethyldithiocarba...

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Autores principales: Kanellis, Dimitris C., Zisi, Asimina, Skrott, Zdenek, Lemmens, Bennie, Espinoza, Jaime A., Kosar, Martin, Björkman, Andrea, Li, Xuexin, Arampatzis, Stefanos, Bartkova, Jirina, Andújar-Sánchez, Miguel, Fernandez-Capetillo, Oscar, Mistrik, Martin, Lindström, Mikael S., Bartek, Jiri
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Nature Publishing Group UK 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10307793/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37142656
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41418-023-01167-4
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author Kanellis, Dimitris C.
Zisi, Asimina
Skrott, Zdenek
Lemmens, Bennie
Espinoza, Jaime A.
Kosar, Martin
Björkman, Andrea
Li, Xuexin
Arampatzis, Stefanos
Bartkova, Jirina
Andújar-Sánchez, Miguel
Fernandez-Capetillo, Oscar
Mistrik, Martin
Lindström, Mikael S.
Bartek, Jiri
author_facet Kanellis, Dimitris C.
Zisi, Asimina
Skrott, Zdenek
Lemmens, Bennie
Espinoza, Jaime A.
Kosar, Martin
Björkman, Andrea
Li, Xuexin
Arampatzis, Stefanos
Bartkova, Jirina
Andújar-Sánchez, Miguel
Fernandez-Capetillo, Oscar
Mistrik, Martin
Lindström, Mikael S.
Bartek, Jiri
author_sort Kanellis, Dimitris C.
collection PubMed
description Drug repurposing is a versatile strategy to improve current therapies. Disulfiram has long been used in the treatment of alcohol dependency and multiple clinical trials to evaluate its clinical value in oncology are ongoing. We have recently reported that the disulfiram metabolite diethyldithiocarbamate, when combined with copper (CuET), targets the NPL4 adapter of the p97VCP segregase to suppress the growth of a spectrum of cancer cell lines and xenograft models in vivo. CuET induces proteotoxic stress and genotoxic effects, however important issues concerning the full range of the CuET-evoked tumor cell phenotypes, their temporal order, and mechanistic basis have remained largely unexplored. Here, we have addressed these outstanding questions and show that in diverse human cancer cell models, CuET causes a very early translational arrest through the integrated stress response (ISR), later followed by features of nucleolar stress. Furthermore, we report that CuET entraps p53 in NPL4-rich aggregates leading to elevated p53 protein and its functional inhibition, consistent with the possibility of CuET-triggered cell death being p53-independent. Our transcriptomics profiling revealed activation of pro-survival adaptive pathways of ribosomal biogenesis (RiBi) and autophagy upon prolonged exposure to CuET, indicating potential feedback responses to CuET treatment. The latter concept was validated here by simultaneous pharmacological inhibition of RiBi and/or autophagy that further enhanced CuET’s tumor cytotoxicity, using both cell culture and zebrafish in vivo preclinical models. Overall, these findings expand the mechanistic repertoire of CuET’s anti-cancer activity, inform about the temporal order of responses and identify an unorthodox new mechanism of targeting p53. Our results are discussed in light of cancer-associated endogenous stresses as exploitable tumor vulnerabilities and may inspire future clinical applications of CuET in oncology, including combinatorial treatments and focus on potential advantages of using certain validated drug metabolites, rather than old, approved drugs with their, often complex, metabolic profiles.
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spelling pubmed-103077932023-06-30 Actionable cancer vulnerability due to translational arrest, p53 aggregation and ribosome biogenesis stress evoked by the disulfiram metabolite CuET Kanellis, Dimitris C. Zisi, Asimina Skrott, Zdenek Lemmens, Bennie Espinoza, Jaime A. Kosar, Martin Björkman, Andrea Li, Xuexin Arampatzis, Stefanos Bartkova, Jirina Andújar-Sánchez, Miguel Fernandez-Capetillo, Oscar Mistrik, Martin Lindström, Mikael S. Bartek, Jiri Cell Death Differ Article Drug repurposing is a versatile strategy to improve current therapies. Disulfiram has long been used in the treatment of alcohol dependency and multiple clinical trials to evaluate its clinical value in oncology are ongoing. We have recently reported that the disulfiram metabolite diethyldithiocarbamate, when combined with copper (CuET), targets the NPL4 adapter of the p97VCP segregase to suppress the growth of a spectrum of cancer cell lines and xenograft models in vivo. CuET induces proteotoxic stress and genotoxic effects, however important issues concerning the full range of the CuET-evoked tumor cell phenotypes, their temporal order, and mechanistic basis have remained largely unexplored. Here, we have addressed these outstanding questions and show that in diverse human cancer cell models, CuET causes a very early translational arrest through the integrated stress response (ISR), later followed by features of nucleolar stress. Furthermore, we report that CuET entraps p53 in NPL4-rich aggregates leading to elevated p53 protein and its functional inhibition, consistent with the possibility of CuET-triggered cell death being p53-independent. Our transcriptomics profiling revealed activation of pro-survival adaptive pathways of ribosomal biogenesis (RiBi) and autophagy upon prolonged exposure to CuET, indicating potential feedback responses to CuET treatment. The latter concept was validated here by simultaneous pharmacological inhibition of RiBi and/or autophagy that further enhanced CuET’s tumor cytotoxicity, using both cell culture and zebrafish in vivo preclinical models. Overall, these findings expand the mechanistic repertoire of CuET’s anti-cancer activity, inform about the temporal order of responses and identify an unorthodox new mechanism of targeting p53. Our results are discussed in light of cancer-associated endogenous stresses as exploitable tumor vulnerabilities and may inspire future clinical applications of CuET in oncology, including combinatorial treatments and focus on potential advantages of using certain validated drug metabolites, rather than old, approved drugs with their, often complex, metabolic profiles. Nature Publishing Group UK 2023-05-04 2023-07 /pmc/articles/PMC10307793/ /pubmed/37142656 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41418-023-01167-4 Text en © The Author(s) 2023 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article’s Creative Commons license and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Article
Kanellis, Dimitris C.
Zisi, Asimina
Skrott, Zdenek
Lemmens, Bennie
Espinoza, Jaime A.
Kosar, Martin
Björkman, Andrea
Li, Xuexin
Arampatzis, Stefanos
Bartkova, Jirina
Andújar-Sánchez, Miguel
Fernandez-Capetillo, Oscar
Mistrik, Martin
Lindström, Mikael S.
Bartek, Jiri
Actionable cancer vulnerability due to translational arrest, p53 aggregation and ribosome biogenesis stress evoked by the disulfiram metabolite CuET
title Actionable cancer vulnerability due to translational arrest, p53 aggregation and ribosome biogenesis stress evoked by the disulfiram metabolite CuET
title_full Actionable cancer vulnerability due to translational arrest, p53 aggregation and ribosome biogenesis stress evoked by the disulfiram metabolite CuET
title_fullStr Actionable cancer vulnerability due to translational arrest, p53 aggregation and ribosome biogenesis stress evoked by the disulfiram metabolite CuET
title_full_unstemmed Actionable cancer vulnerability due to translational arrest, p53 aggregation and ribosome biogenesis stress evoked by the disulfiram metabolite CuET
title_short Actionable cancer vulnerability due to translational arrest, p53 aggregation and ribosome biogenesis stress evoked by the disulfiram metabolite CuET
title_sort actionable cancer vulnerability due to translational arrest, p53 aggregation and ribosome biogenesis stress evoked by the disulfiram metabolite cuet
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10307793/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37142656
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41418-023-01167-4
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