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High-Affinity Accumulation of a Maytansinoid in Cells via Weak Tubulin Interaction

The microtubule-targeting maytansinoids accumulate in cells and induce mitotic arrest at 250- to 1000-fold lower concentrations than those required for their association with tubulin or microtubules. To identify the mechanisms of this intracellular accumulation and exceptional cytotoxicity of maytan...

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Autores principales: Goldmacher, Victor S., Audette, Charlene A., Guan, Yinghua, Sidhom, Eriene-Heidi, Shah, Jagesh V., Whiteman, Kathleen R., Kovtun, Yelena V.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4324968/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25671541
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0117523
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author Goldmacher, Victor S.
Audette, Charlene A.
Guan, Yinghua
Sidhom, Eriene-Heidi
Shah, Jagesh V.
Whiteman, Kathleen R.
Kovtun, Yelena V.
author_facet Goldmacher, Victor S.
Audette, Charlene A.
Guan, Yinghua
Sidhom, Eriene-Heidi
Shah, Jagesh V.
Whiteman, Kathleen R.
Kovtun, Yelena V.
author_sort Goldmacher, Victor S.
collection PubMed
description The microtubule-targeting maytansinoids accumulate in cells and induce mitotic arrest at 250- to 1000-fold lower concentrations than those required for their association with tubulin or microtubules. To identify the mechanisms of this intracellular accumulation and exceptional cytotoxicity of maytansinoids we studied interaction of a highly cytotoxic maytansinoid, S-methyl DM1 and several other maytansinoids with cells. S-methyl DM1 accumulated inside the cells with a markedly higher apparent affinity than to tubulin or microtubules. The apparent affinities of maytansinoids correlated with their cytotoxicities. The number of intracellular binding sites for S-methyl DM1 in MCF7 cells was comparable to the number of tubulin molecules per cell (~ 4–6 × 10(7) copies). Efflux of (3) [H]-S-methyl DM1 from cells was enhanced in the presence of an excess of non-labeled S-methyl DM1, indicating that re-binding of (3) [H]-S-methyl DM1 to intracellular binding sites contributed to its intracellular retention. Liposomes loaded with non-polymerized tubulin recapitulated the apparent high-affinity association of S-methyl DM1 to cells. We propose a model for the intracellular accumulation of maytansinoids in which molecules of the compounds diffuse into a cell and associate with tubulin. Affinities of maytansinoids for individual tubulin molecules are weak, but the high intracellular concentration of tubulin favors, after dissociation of a compound-tubulin complex, their re-binding to a tubulin molecule, or to a tip of a microtubule in the same cell, over their efflux. As a result, a significant fraction of microtubule tips is occupied with a maytansinoid when added to cells at sub-nanomolar concentrations, inducing mitotic arrest and cell death.
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spelling pubmed-43249682015-02-18 High-Affinity Accumulation of a Maytansinoid in Cells via Weak Tubulin Interaction Goldmacher, Victor S. Audette, Charlene A. Guan, Yinghua Sidhom, Eriene-Heidi Shah, Jagesh V. Whiteman, Kathleen R. Kovtun, Yelena V. PLoS One Research Article The microtubule-targeting maytansinoids accumulate in cells and induce mitotic arrest at 250- to 1000-fold lower concentrations than those required for their association with tubulin or microtubules. To identify the mechanisms of this intracellular accumulation and exceptional cytotoxicity of maytansinoids we studied interaction of a highly cytotoxic maytansinoid, S-methyl DM1 and several other maytansinoids with cells. S-methyl DM1 accumulated inside the cells with a markedly higher apparent affinity than to tubulin or microtubules. The apparent affinities of maytansinoids correlated with their cytotoxicities. The number of intracellular binding sites for S-methyl DM1 in MCF7 cells was comparable to the number of tubulin molecules per cell (~ 4–6 × 10(7) copies). Efflux of (3) [H]-S-methyl DM1 from cells was enhanced in the presence of an excess of non-labeled S-methyl DM1, indicating that re-binding of (3) [H]-S-methyl DM1 to intracellular binding sites contributed to its intracellular retention. Liposomes loaded with non-polymerized tubulin recapitulated the apparent high-affinity association of S-methyl DM1 to cells. We propose a model for the intracellular accumulation of maytansinoids in which molecules of the compounds diffuse into a cell and associate with tubulin. Affinities of maytansinoids for individual tubulin molecules are weak, but the high intracellular concentration of tubulin favors, after dissociation of a compound-tubulin complex, their re-binding to a tubulin molecule, or to a tip of a microtubule in the same cell, over their efflux. As a result, a significant fraction of microtubule tips is occupied with a maytansinoid when added to cells at sub-nanomolar concentrations, inducing mitotic arrest and cell death. Public Library of Science 2015-02-11 /pmc/articles/PMC4324968/ /pubmed/25671541 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0117523 Text en © 2015 Goldmacher et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Goldmacher, Victor S.
Audette, Charlene A.
Guan, Yinghua
Sidhom, Eriene-Heidi
Shah, Jagesh V.
Whiteman, Kathleen R.
Kovtun, Yelena V.
High-Affinity Accumulation of a Maytansinoid in Cells via Weak Tubulin Interaction
title High-Affinity Accumulation of a Maytansinoid in Cells via Weak Tubulin Interaction
title_full High-Affinity Accumulation of a Maytansinoid in Cells via Weak Tubulin Interaction
title_fullStr High-Affinity Accumulation of a Maytansinoid in Cells via Weak Tubulin Interaction
title_full_unstemmed High-Affinity Accumulation of a Maytansinoid in Cells via Weak Tubulin Interaction
title_short High-Affinity Accumulation of a Maytansinoid in Cells via Weak Tubulin Interaction
title_sort high-affinity accumulation of a maytansinoid in cells via weak tubulin interaction
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4324968/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25671541
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0117523
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