SUMMARY The multifunctional, stress-inducible, molecular chaperone HSP70 has important roles in aiding protein folding and maintaining protein homeostasis. HSP70 expression is elevated in many cancers, contributing to tumor cell survival and resistance to therapy. We have determined that a small molecule called 2-Phenylethynesulfonamide (PES) interacts selectively with HSP70, and leads to a disruption of the association between HSP70 and several of its co-chaperones and substrate proteins. Treatment of cultured tumor cells with PES promotes cell death that is associated with protein aggregation, impaired autophagy, and inhibition of lysosomal function. Moreover, this small molecule is able to suppress tumor development and enhance survival in a mouse model of Myc-induced lymphomagenesis. The data demonstrate that PES disrupts actions of HSP70 in multiple cell signaling pathways offering an opportunity to better understand the diverse functions of this molecular chaperone, and also to aid in the development of new cancer therapies.
The evolutionarily conserved stress-inducible HSP70 molecular chaperone plays a central role in maintaining protein quality control in response to various forms of stress. Constitutively elevated HSP70 expression is a characteristic of many tumor cells and contributes to their survival. We recently identified the small-molecule 2-phenylethyenesulfonamide (PES) as a novel HSP70 inhibitor. Here we present evidence that PES-mediated inhibition of HSP70-family proteins in tumor cells results in an impairment of the two major protein degradation systems, namely the autophagy-lysosome system as well as the proteasome pathway. HSP70-family proteins work closely with the HSP90 molecular chaperone to maintain the stability and activities of their many client proteins and PES causes a disruption in the HSP70/HSP90 chaperone system. As a consequence, many cellular proteins, including known HSP70/HSP90 substrates, accumulate in detergent-insoluble cell fractions, indicative of aggregation and functional inactivation. Overall, PES simultaneously disrupts several cancer-critical survival pathways, supporting the idea of targeting HSP70 as a potential approach for cancer therapeutics.
The ARF tumor suppressor controls a well-described p53/ Mdm2-dependent oncogenic stress checkpoint. In addition, ARF has recently been shown to localize to mitochondria, and to induce autophagy; however, this has never before been demonstrated for endogenous ARF, and the molecular basis for this activity of ARF has not been elucidated. Using an unbiased mass spectrometry-based approach, we show that mitochondrial ARF interacts with the Bcl2 family member Bcl-xl, which normally protects cells from autophagy by inhibiting the Beclin-1/Vps34 complex, which is essential for autophagy. We find that increased expression of ARF decreases Beclin-1/Bcl-xl complexes in cells, thereby providing a basis for ARF-induced autophagy. Our data also indicate that silencing p53 leads to high levels of ARF and increased autophagy, thereby providing a possible basis for the finding by others that p53 inhibits autophagy. The combined data support the premise that ARF induces autophagy in a p53-independent manner in part by virtue of its interaction with Bcl-xl.The ARF tumor suppressor, p14 ARF in humans and p19 ARF in mouse, is a critical growth suppressor that is up-regulated by chronic mitogenic signals and localizes predominantly to the nucleolus. At the nucleolus and in the nucleoplasm, ARF can exert both p53-dependent and -independent growth suppressive function, by virtue of interaction with and inhibition of MDM2, nucleophosmin, E2F-1, CtBP, c-Myc, as well as others (see Ref. 1 for review). Recently, a small molecular weight variant of ARF, generated by translation from an internal methionine, has been discovered to localize primarily to mitochondria and to induce autophagy (2). More recently, another group has shown that full-length ARF, in addition to the small molecular weight variant, can likewise induce autophagy (3). However, neither of these studies revealed a mechanism whereby ARF induces autophagy.Autophagy is an evolutionarily conserved homeostatic process whereby cytosolic components are targeted for removal or turnover in membrane-bound compartments (autophagosomes) that fuse with the lysosome (for review see Ref. 4). This process regulates the turnover of damaged organelles and longlived proteins that are too large to be delivered to the proteasome. Autophagy occurs constitutively at low levels and is greatly induced during period of metabolic stress, where lysosome-mediated digestion of sequestered molecules serves to release free amino acids and ATP to fuel the continued survival of the cell.Several genes are implicated in the control of autophagy. Perhaps most notable of these is Beclin-1, which is an evolutionarily-conserved mediator of autophagy, with structural similarity to the yeast autophagy gene Apg6/Vps30. Beclin-1 is a component of the class III PI3 kinase complex that includes Vps34; this complex regulates the formation and nucleation of autophagosomes, and the regulation of the activity of this complex is tightly regulated. For example, Beclin-1 possesses a BH3 domain that interacts with the BH3 bind...
Tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL) is a cytotoxic agent that preferentially induces apoptosis in a variety of human cancer cells. Unfortunately, some tumor cells remain resistant to TRAIL. Therefore, agents that sensitize malignant cells to TRAIL-mediated cell death might be of particular importance for the development of novel antitumor therapeutic regimens. Recent studies establish a critical role of selenium in prostate cancer prevention in vitro and in vivo. Here, we demonstrate that concomitant administration of TRAIL and methylseleninic acid (MSA) produces synergistic effects on the induction of apoptosis in androgen-dependent LNCaP and androgen-independent DU-145 prostate cancer cells. MSA rapidly and specifically downregulates expression of the cellular FLICE inhibitory protein, a negative regulator of death receptor signaling. In addition, we demonstrate that the synergistic effects of MSA and TRAIL result from the activation of the mitochondrial pathway-mediated amplification loop. Addition of MSA effectively blocked TRAIL-mediated BAD phosphorylation at Ser112 and Ser136 in DU-145 cells and was accompanied by induction of the mitochondrial permeability transition and release of apoptogenic cytochrome c and Smac/DIABLO proteins from the mitochondria and into the cytosol. These results suggest that selenium-based dietary compounds may help to overcome resistance to TRAIL-mediated apoptosis in prostate cancer cells.
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