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Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing

Drug repurposing approaches have the potential advantage of facilitating rapid and cost-effective development of new therapies. Particularly, the repurposing of drugs with known safety profiles in children could bypass or streamline toxicity studies. We employed a phenotypic screening paradigm on a...

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Autores principales: Shen, Min, Asawa, Rosita, Zhang, Ya-Qin, Cunningham, Elizabeth, Sun, Hongmao, Tropsha, Alexander, Janzen, William P., Muratov, Eugene N., Capuzzi, Stephen J., Farag, Sherif, Jadhav, Ajit, Blatt, Julie, Simeonov, Anton, Martinez, Natalia J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5797010/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29435139
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.23462
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author Shen, Min
Asawa, Rosita
Zhang, Ya-Qin
Cunningham, Elizabeth
Sun, Hongmao
Tropsha, Alexander
Janzen, William P.
Muratov, Eugene N.
Capuzzi, Stephen J.
Farag, Sherif
Jadhav, Ajit
Blatt, Julie
Simeonov, Anton
Martinez, Natalia J.
author_facet Shen, Min
Asawa, Rosita
Zhang, Ya-Qin
Cunningham, Elizabeth
Sun, Hongmao
Tropsha, Alexander
Janzen, William P.
Muratov, Eugene N.
Capuzzi, Stephen J.
Farag, Sherif
Jadhav, Ajit
Blatt, Julie
Simeonov, Anton
Martinez, Natalia J.
author_sort Shen, Min
collection PubMed
description Drug repurposing approaches have the potential advantage of facilitating rapid and cost-effective development of new therapies. Particularly, the repurposing of drugs with known safety profiles in children could bypass or streamline toxicity studies. We employed a phenotypic screening paradigm on a panel of well-characterized cell lines derived from pediatric solid tumors against a collection of ∼3,800 compounds spanning approved drugs and investigational agents. Specifically, we employed titration-based screening where compounds were tested at multiple concentrations for their effect on cell viability. Molecular and cellular target enrichment analysis indicated that numerous agents across different therapeutic categories and modes of action had an antiproliferative effect, notably antiparasitic/protozoal drugs with non-classic antineoplastic activity. Focusing on active compounds with dosing and safety information in children according to the Children's Pharmacy Collaborative database, we identified compounds with therapeutic potential through further validation using 3D tumor spheroid models. Moreover, we show that antiparasitic agents induce cell death via apoptosis induction. This study demonstrates that our screening platform enables the identification of chemical agents with cytotoxic activity in pediatric cancer cell lines of which many have known safety/toxicity profiles in children. These agents constitute attractive candidates for efficacy studies in pre-clinical models of pediatric solid tumors.
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spelling pubmed-57970102018-02-12 Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing Shen, Min Asawa, Rosita Zhang, Ya-Qin Cunningham, Elizabeth Sun, Hongmao Tropsha, Alexander Janzen, William P. Muratov, Eugene N. Capuzzi, Stephen J. Farag, Sherif Jadhav, Ajit Blatt, Julie Simeonov, Anton Martinez, Natalia J. Oncotarget Research Paper Drug repurposing approaches have the potential advantage of facilitating rapid and cost-effective development of new therapies. Particularly, the repurposing of drugs with known safety profiles in children could bypass or streamline toxicity studies. We employed a phenotypic screening paradigm on a panel of well-characterized cell lines derived from pediatric solid tumors against a collection of ∼3,800 compounds spanning approved drugs and investigational agents. Specifically, we employed titration-based screening where compounds were tested at multiple concentrations for their effect on cell viability. Molecular and cellular target enrichment analysis indicated that numerous agents across different therapeutic categories and modes of action had an antiproliferative effect, notably antiparasitic/protozoal drugs with non-classic antineoplastic activity. Focusing on active compounds with dosing and safety information in children according to the Children's Pharmacy Collaborative database, we identified compounds with therapeutic potential through further validation using 3D tumor spheroid models. Moreover, we show that antiparasitic agents induce cell death via apoptosis induction. This study demonstrates that our screening platform enables the identification of chemical agents with cytotoxic activity in pediatric cancer cell lines of which many have known safety/toxicity profiles in children. These agents constitute attractive candidates for efficacy studies in pre-clinical models of pediatric solid tumors. Impact Journals LLC 2017-12-19 /pmc/articles/PMC5797010/ /pubmed/29435139 http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.23462 Text en Copyright: © 2018 Shen et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/) (CC-BY), which permits unrestricted use and redistribution provided that the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Shen, Min
Asawa, Rosita
Zhang, Ya-Qin
Cunningham, Elizabeth
Sun, Hongmao
Tropsha, Alexander
Janzen, William P.
Muratov, Eugene N.
Capuzzi, Stephen J.
Farag, Sherif
Jadhav, Ajit
Blatt, Julie
Simeonov, Anton
Martinez, Natalia J.
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing
title Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing
title_full Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing
title_fullStr Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing
title_full_unstemmed Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing
title_short Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing
title_sort quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5797010/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29435139
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.23462
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