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Identification of novel small molecule inhibitors of centrosome clustering in cancer cells

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Identification of novel small molecule inhibitors of centrosome clustering in cancer cells. / Kawamura, Eiko; Fielding, Andrew B.; Kannan, Nagarajan et al.
In: Oncotarget, Vol. 4, No. 10, 10.2013, p. 1763-1776.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Kawamura, E, Fielding, AB, Kannan, N, Balgi, A, Eaves, CJ, Roberge, M & Dedhar, S 2013, 'Identification of novel small molecule inhibitors of centrosome clustering in cancer cells', Oncotarget, vol. 4, no. 10, pp. 1763-1776. https://doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.1198

APA

Kawamura, E., Fielding, A. B., Kannan, N., Balgi, A., Eaves, C. J., Roberge, M., & Dedhar, S. (2013). Identification of novel small molecule inhibitors of centrosome clustering in cancer cells. Oncotarget, 4(10), 1763-1776. https://doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.1198

Vancouver

Kawamura E, Fielding AB, Kannan N, Balgi A, Eaves CJ, Roberge M et al. Identification of novel small molecule inhibitors of centrosome clustering in cancer cells. Oncotarget. 2013 Oct;4(10):1763-1776. Epub 2013 Sept 25. doi: 10.18632/oncotarget.1198

Author

Kawamura, Eiko ; Fielding, Andrew B. ; Kannan, Nagarajan et al. / Identification of novel small molecule inhibitors of centrosome clustering in cancer cells. In: Oncotarget. 2013 ; Vol. 4, No. 10. pp. 1763-1776.

Bibtex

@article{d1c88f9429e04e3fa784540081f3e88b,
title = "Identification of novel small molecule inhibitors of centrosome clustering in cancer cells",
abstract = "Most normal cells have two centrosomes that form bipolar spindles during mitosis, while cancer cells often contain more than two, or {"}supernumerary{"} centrosomes. Such cancer cells achieve bipolar division by clustering their centrosomes into two functional poles, and inhibiting this process then leads to cancer-specific cell death. A major problem with clinically used anti-mitotic drugs, such as paclitaxel, is their toxicity in normal cells. To discover new compounds with greater specificity for cancer cells, we established a high-content screen for agents that block centrosome clustering in BT-549 cells, a breast cancer cell line that harbors supernumerary centrosomes. Using this screen, we identified 14 compounds that inhibit centrosome clustering and induce mitotic arrest. Some of these compounds were structurally similar, suggesting a common structural motif important for preventing centrosome clustering. We next compared the effects of these compounds on the growth of several breast and other cancer cell lines, an immortalized normal human mammary epithelial cell line, and progenitor-enriched primary normal human mammary epithelial cells. From these comparisons, we found some compounds that kill breast cancer cells, but not their normal epithelial counterparts, suggesting their potential for targeted therapy. One of these compounds, N2-(3-pyridylmethyl)-5-nitro-2-furamide (Centrosome Clustering Chemical Inhibitor-01, CCCI-01), that showed the greatest differential response in this screen was confirmed to have selective effects on cancer as compared to normal breast progenitors using more precise apoptosis induction and clonogenic growth endpoints. The concentration of CCCI-01 that killed cancer cells in the clonogenic assay spared normal human bone marrow hematopoietic progenitors in the colony-forming cell assay, indicating a potential therapeutic window for CCCI-01, whose selectivity might be further improved by optimizing the compound. Immunofluorescence analysis showed that treatment with CCCI-01 lead to multipolar spindles in BT-549, while maintaining bipolar spindles in the normal primary human mammary epithelial cells. Since centrosome clustering is a complex process involving multiple pathways, the 14 compounds identified in this study provide a potentially novel means to developing non-cross-resistant anti-cancer drugs that block centrosome clustering.",
keywords = "Apoptosis, Breast Neoplasms, Cell Death, Cell Line, Tumor, Centrosome, Female, Humans, Microscopy, Fluorescence, Small Molecule Libraries, Spindle Apparatus, Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't",
author = "Eiko Kawamura and Fielding, {Andrew B.} and Nagarajan Kannan and Aruna Balgi and Eaves, {Connie J.} and Michel Roberge and Shoukat Dedhar",
year = "2013",
month = oct,
doi = "10.18632/oncotarget.1198",
language = "English",
volume = "4",
pages = "1763--1776",
journal = "Oncotarget",
issn = "1949-2553",
publisher = "Impact Journals",
number = "10",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Identification of novel small molecule inhibitors of centrosome clustering in cancer cells

AU - Kawamura, Eiko

AU - Fielding, Andrew B.

AU - Kannan, Nagarajan

AU - Balgi, Aruna

AU - Eaves, Connie J.

AU - Roberge, Michel

AU - Dedhar, Shoukat

PY - 2013/10

Y1 - 2013/10

N2 - Most normal cells have two centrosomes that form bipolar spindles during mitosis, while cancer cells often contain more than two, or "supernumerary" centrosomes. Such cancer cells achieve bipolar division by clustering their centrosomes into two functional poles, and inhibiting this process then leads to cancer-specific cell death. A major problem with clinically used anti-mitotic drugs, such as paclitaxel, is their toxicity in normal cells. To discover new compounds with greater specificity for cancer cells, we established a high-content screen for agents that block centrosome clustering in BT-549 cells, a breast cancer cell line that harbors supernumerary centrosomes. Using this screen, we identified 14 compounds that inhibit centrosome clustering and induce mitotic arrest. Some of these compounds were structurally similar, suggesting a common structural motif important for preventing centrosome clustering. We next compared the effects of these compounds on the growth of several breast and other cancer cell lines, an immortalized normal human mammary epithelial cell line, and progenitor-enriched primary normal human mammary epithelial cells. From these comparisons, we found some compounds that kill breast cancer cells, but not their normal epithelial counterparts, suggesting their potential for targeted therapy. One of these compounds, N2-(3-pyridylmethyl)-5-nitro-2-furamide (Centrosome Clustering Chemical Inhibitor-01, CCCI-01), that showed the greatest differential response in this screen was confirmed to have selective effects on cancer as compared to normal breast progenitors using more precise apoptosis induction and clonogenic growth endpoints. The concentration of CCCI-01 that killed cancer cells in the clonogenic assay spared normal human bone marrow hematopoietic progenitors in the colony-forming cell assay, indicating a potential therapeutic window for CCCI-01, whose selectivity might be further improved by optimizing the compound. Immunofluorescence analysis showed that treatment with CCCI-01 lead to multipolar spindles in BT-549, while maintaining bipolar spindles in the normal primary human mammary epithelial cells. Since centrosome clustering is a complex process involving multiple pathways, the 14 compounds identified in this study provide a potentially novel means to developing non-cross-resistant anti-cancer drugs that block centrosome clustering.

AB - Most normal cells have two centrosomes that form bipolar spindles during mitosis, while cancer cells often contain more than two, or "supernumerary" centrosomes. Such cancer cells achieve bipolar division by clustering their centrosomes into two functional poles, and inhibiting this process then leads to cancer-specific cell death. A major problem with clinically used anti-mitotic drugs, such as paclitaxel, is their toxicity in normal cells. To discover new compounds with greater specificity for cancer cells, we established a high-content screen for agents that block centrosome clustering in BT-549 cells, a breast cancer cell line that harbors supernumerary centrosomes. Using this screen, we identified 14 compounds that inhibit centrosome clustering and induce mitotic arrest. Some of these compounds were structurally similar, suggesting a common structural motif important for preventing centrosome clustering. We next compared the effects of these compounds on the growth of several breast and other cancer cell lines, an immortalized normal human mammary epithelial cell line, and progenitor-enriched primary normal human mammary epithelial cells. From these comparisons, we found some compounds that kill breast cancer cells, but not their normal epithelial counterparts, suggesting their potential for targeted therapy. One of these compounds, N2-(3-pyridylmethyl)-5-nitro-2-furamide (Centrosome Clustering Chemical Inhibitor-01, CCCI-01), that showed the greatest differential response in this screen was confirmed to have selective effects on cancer as compared to normal breast progenitors using more precise apoptosis induction and clonogenic growth endpoints. The concentration of CCCI-01 that killed cancer cells in the clonogenic assay spared normal human bone marrow hematopoietic progenitors in the colony-forming cell assay, indicating a potential therapeutic window for CCCI-01, whose selectivity might be further improved by optimizing the compound. Immunofluorescence analysis showed that treatment with CCCI-01 lead to multipolar spindles in BT-549, while maintaining bipolar spindles in the normal primary human mammary epithelial cells. Since centrosome clustering is a complex process involving multiple pathways, the 14 compounds identified in this study provide a potentially novel means to developing non-cross-resistant anti-cancer drugs that block centrosome clustering.

KW - Apoptosis

KW - Breast Neoplasms

KW - Cell Death

KW - Cell Line, Tumor

KW - Centrosome

KW - Female

KW - Humans

KW - Microscopy, Fluorescence

KW - Small Molecule Libraries

KW - Spindle Apparatus

KW - Journal Article

KW - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

U2 - 10.18632/oncotarget.1198

DO - 10.18632/oncotarget.1198

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 24091544

VL - 4

SP - 1763

EP - 1776

JO - Oncotarget

JF - Oncotarget

SN - 1949-2553

IS - 10

ER -