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Small molecule schweinfurthins selectively inhibit cancer cell proliferation and mTOR/AKT signaling by interfering with trans-Golgi-network trafficking
Authors:Xingfeng Bao  Wanjun Zheng  Naoko Hata Sugi  Kishan L Agarwala  Qunli Xu  Zichun Wang  Karen Tendyke  Winnie Lee  Lana Parent  Wei Li  Hongsheng Cheng  Yongchun Shen  Noel Taylor  Zoltan Dezso  Hong Du  Yoshihiko Kotake  Nanding Zhao  John Wang  Maarten Postema  Mary Woodall-Jappe  Yasutaka Takase  Toshimitsu Uenaka  David G I Kingston  Kenichi Nomoto
Affiliation:1.Eisai Inc.; Andover, MA, USA;2.Tsukuba Research Laboratory; Eisai Co.; Ibaraki, Japan;3.Department of Chemistry and Virginia Tech Center for Drug Discovery; Virginia Tech; Blacksburg, VA, USA;4.Takeda Oncology; Cambridge, MA, USA;5.Mersana Therapeutics; Cambridge, MA, USA;6.Norvartis Institutes for Biomedical Research; Cambridge, MA, USA;7.H3 Biomedicine Inc.; Cambridge, MA, USA;8.Morphotek Inc.; Exton, PA, USA
Abstract:
Natural compound schweinfurthins are of considerable interest for novel therapy development because of their selective anti-proliferative activity against human cancer cells. We previously reported the isolation of highly active schweinfurthins E-H, and in the present study, mechanisms of the potent and selective anti-proliferation were investigated. We found that schweinfurthins preferentially inhibited the proliferation of PTEN deficient cancer cells by indirect inhibition of AKT phosphorylation. Mechanistically, schweinfurthins and their analogs arrested trans-Golgi-network trafficking, an intracellular vesicular trafficking system, resulting in the induction of endoplasmic reticulum stress and the suppression of both lipid raft-mediated PI3K activation and mTOR/RheB complex formation, which collectively led to an effective inhibition of mTOR/AKT signaling. The trans-Golgi-network traffic arresting effect of schweinfurthins was associated with their in vitro binding activity to oxysterol-binding proteins that are known to regulate intracellular vesicular trafficking. Moreover, schweinfurthins were found to be highly toxic toward PTEN-deficient B cell lymphoma cells, and displayed 2 orders of magnitude lower activity toward normal human peripheral blood mononuclear cells and primary fibroblasts in vitro. These results revealed a previously unrecognized role of schweinfurthins in regulating trans-Golgi-network trafficking, and linked mechanistically this cellular effect with mTOR/AKT signaling and with cancer cell survival and growth. Our findings suggest the schweinfurthin class of compounds as a novel approach to modulate oncogenic mTOR/AKT signaling for cancer treatment.
Keywords:diffuse large B cell lymphoma   natural compounds   mTOR-AKT signaling   schweinfurthins   trans-Golgi-network
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