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Vol. 62, Issue 2, 351-358, August 2002
Huntsman Cancer Institute, Department of Medicinal Chemistry,
University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah
The tumor suppressor p53 is mutated in more than 50% of all cancers.
Importantly, most clinically useful antineoplastic agents are less
potent and efficacious in the context of mutant p53. This situation has
prompted a search for agents that cause tumor cell death via molecular
mechanisms independent of p53. Our recent investigations with
electrophilic prostaglandins enabled us to devise a pharmacophore and
mechanism of action hypothesis relevant to this problem: a
cross-conjugated
,
-unsaturated dienone with two sterically
accessible electrophilic
-carbons is a molecular determinant that
confers activity among this class of ubiquitin isopeptidases
inhibitors, and that inhibitors of ubiquitin isopeptidases cause cell
death in vitro independently of p53. Here, we report the use of the
National Cancer Institute's Developmental Therapeutics Database to
identify compounds to test this hypothesis. Shikoccin (a diterpene),
dibenzylideneacetone, and curcumin fit the pharmacophore hypothesis,
inhibit cellular isopeptidases, and cause cell death independently of
p53 in isogenic pairs of RKO and HCT 116 cells with differential p53
status. The sesquiterpene achillin and
2,6-diphenyl-4H-thiopyran-4-one, which have
cross-conjugated dienones with sterically hindered electrophilic
-carbons, do not inhibit isopeptidases or cause significant cell
death. Furthermore, we show that a catalytic-site proteasome inhibitor
causes cell death independently of p53. Combined, these data verify the
p53-independence of cell death caused by inhibitors of the proteasome
pathway and support the proposition that the ubiquitin-dependent
proteasome pathway may contain molecular targets suitable for
antineoplastic drug discovery.
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