The export protein CRM1 is required for the nuclear export of a wide variety of cancer-related ''cargo'' proteins including p53, c-Abl, and FOXO-3A. Leptomycin B (LMB) is a highly specific inhibitor of CRM1 with significant in vitro potency but limited in vivo efficacy due to toxicity. We now report a series of semisynthetic LMB derivatives showing substantially improved therapeutic windows. Exposure of cancer cells to these compounds leads to a rapid and prolonged block of nuclear export and apoptosis. In contrast to what is observed in cancer cells, these agents induce cell cycle arrest, but not apoptosis, in normal lung fibroblasts. These new nuclear export inhibitors (NEI) maintain the high potency of LMB, are up to 16-fold better tolerated than LMB in vivo, and show significant efficacy in multiple mouse xenograft models. These NEIs show the potential of CRM1 inhibitors as novel and potent anticancer agents. [Cancer Res 2009;69(2):510-7]
Translational control has recently been recognized as an important facet of adaptive responses to various stress conditions. We describe the adaptation response of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae to the loss of one of two mechanisms to target proteins to the secretory pathway. Using inducible mutants that block the signal recognition particle (SRP) pathway, we find that cells demonstrate a physiological response to the loss of the SRP pathway that includes specific changes in global gene expression. Upon inducing the loss of the SRP pathway, SRP-dependent protein translocation is initially blocked, and cell growth is considerably slowed. Concomitantly, gene expression changes include the induction of heat shock genes and the repression of protein synthesis genes. Remarkably, within hours, the efficiency of protein sorting improves while cell growth remains slow in agreement with the persistent repression of protein synthesis genes. Our results suggest that heat shock gene induction serves to protect cells from mislocalized precursor proteins in the cytosol, whereas reduced protein synthesis helps to regain efficiency in protein sorting by reducing the load on the protein translocation apparatus. Thus, we suggest that cells trade speed in cell growth for fidelity in protein sorting to adjust to life without SRP.
The epothilones are a family of polyketide natural products that show a high potential as anticancer drugs. They are synthesized by the action of a hybrid nonribosomal peptide synthetase/polyketide synthase in the myxobacterium Sorangium cellulosum. In this work, the genes encoding the entire cluster,epoA, epoB, epoC, epoD, epoE, and epoF, were redesigned and synthesized to allow for expression in Escherichia coli. The expression of the largest of the proteins, EpoD, also required the protein be separated into two polypeptides with compatible module linkers. Using a combination of lowered temperature, chaperone coexpression, and alternative promoters, we succeeded in producing a soluble protein from all genes in the epothilone cluster. The entire synthetic epothilone cluster was then expressed in a strain of E. coli modified to enable polyketide biosynthesis, resulting in the production of epothilones C and D. Furthermore, feeding a thioester of the normal substrate for EpoD to cells expressing the epoD, epoE, and epoF genes also led to the production of epothilones C and D. The design of the synthetic epothilone genes together with E. coli expression provides the ideal platform for both the biochemical investigation of the epothilone PKS and the generation of novel biosynthetic epothilone analogues.
Polyketides are a diverse group of natural products with significance in human and veterinary medicine. Because polyketides are structurally complex molecules and fermentation is the most commercially viable route of production, a generic heterologous host system for high-level polyketide production is desirable. Saccharomyces cerevisiae has been shown to be an excellent production host for a simple polyketide, yielding 1.7 g of 6-methylsalicylic acid per liter of culture in un-optimized shake-flask fermentations. However, a barrier to the heterologous production of more complex 'modular' polyketides in S. cerevisiae is the lack of required polyketide precursor pathways. In this work, we describe the introduction into S. cerevisiae of pathways for the production of methylmalonyl-coenzyme A (CoA), a precursor for complex polyketides, by both propionyl-CoA-dependent and propionyl-CoA-independent routes. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the methylmalonyl-CoA produced in the engineered yeast strains is used in vivo for the production of a polyketide product, a triketide lactone.
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