The clinical development of an inhibitor of cellular proteasome function suggests that compounds targeting other components of the ubiquitin-proteasome system might prove useful for the treatment of human malignancies. NEDD8-activating enzyme (NAE) is an essential component of the NEDD8 conjugation pathway that controls the activity of the cullin-RING subtype of ubiquitin ligases, thereby regulating the turnover of a subset of proteins upstream of the proteasome. Substrates of cullin-RING ligases have important roles in cellular processes associated with cancer cell growth and survival pathways. Here we describe MLN4924, a potent and selective inhibitor of NAE. MLN4924 disrupts cullin-RING ligase-mediated protein turnover leading to apoptotic death in human tumour cells by a new mechanism of action, the deregulation of S-phase DNA synthesis. MLN4924 suppressed the growth of human tumour xenografts in mice at compound exposures that were well tolerated. Our data suggest that NAE inhibitors may hold promise for the treatment of cancer.
(Macro)autophagy is a bulk degradation process that mediates the clearance of long-lived proteins and organelles. Autophagy is initiated by double-membraned structures, which engulf portions of cytoplasm. The resulting autophagosomes ultimately fuse with lysosomes, where their contents are degraded. Although the term autophagy was first used in 1963, the field has witnessed dramatic growth in the last 5 years, partly as a consequence of the discovery of key components of its cellular machinery. In this review we focus on mammalian autophagy, and we give an overview of the understanding of its machinery and the signaling cascades that regulate it. As recent studies have also shown that autophagy is critical in a range of normal human physiological processes, and defective autophagy is associated with diverse diseases, including neurodegeneration, lysosomal storage diseases, cancers, and Crohn's disease, we discuss the roles of autophagy in health and disease, while trying to critically evaluate if the coincidence between autophagy and these conditions is causal or an epiphenomenon. Finally, we consider the possibility of autophagy upregulation as a therapeutic approach for various conditions.
IntroductionMLN4924 is a potent and selective small-molecule inhibitor of NEDD8-activating enzyme (NAE) that is currently in phase 1 clinical trials. 1-3 NAE plays an essential role in regulating the activity of a subset of ubiquitin E3 ligases, the cullin-RING ligases (CRLs), which are responsible for regulating destruction of many intracellular proteins. 4 NAE activates the small ubiquitin-like molecule NEDD8 as the first step in the neddylation cascade. 5 NAE hydrolyzes adenosine triphosphate (ATP) to adenylate NEDD8 at its C-terminus and transfers NEDD8 from the adenyl group to a specific cysteine within NAE. The activated NEDD8 is then transferred to the active-site cysteine of Ubc12 or UBE2F the E2s specific for the NEDD8 pathway. Finally, NEDD8 is conjugated on a conserved lysine near the C-terminal end of a cullin protein; this covalent modification is required for the cullin complex to recruit a ubiquitin-charged E2 protein facilitating polyubiquitination of proteins, targeting them for proteasomal degradation. Thus, NAE plays a key role in regulating the levels (and therefore the function) of a subset of proteins.Many of the proteins that are substrates for CRL-mediated polyubiquitination have key roles in cell-cycle progression and signal transduction, making NAE inhibition an attractive target for anticancer therapy. MLN4924 potently inhibits NAE in vitro, resulting in inhibition of CRL neddylation and an increase in levels of CRL substrate proteins (eg, Cdt-1, Nrf-2). 3 The primary mechanism of action of NAE inhibition in many cell types is induction of DNA rereplication because of blocking degradation of Cdt-1, a critical factor required for licensing origins of DNA replication. 3 Dysregulation of Cdt-1 activity leads to DNA rereplication. 6,7 For example, overexpression of Cdt-1 and Cdc6 induces DNA rereplication, activates DNA damage repair pathways, and induces cell death. 7 Induction of DNA rereplication by MLN4924 results in S-phase accumulation, DNA-damage responses, and cell death 3 (M.A.M., U.N., T.A.S., P. Veiby, P.G.S., B. Amidon, manuscript in preparation). Similar effects were observed in human tumor xenografts where MLN4924 inhibited NAE in vivo leading to tumor growth inhibition. 3 The nuclear factor-B (NF-B) signaling pathway plays a key role in many aspects of cancer initiation and progression through transcriptional control of genes involved in growth, angiogenesis, antiapoptosis, invasiveness, and metastasis. 8 Regulation of NF-B signaling occurs at many levels, one of which is through the regulation of protein turnover by the action of CRLs. Under normal conditions, NF-B transcription factors are maintained in an inactive state by binding to IB proteins. In canonical NF-B signaling, IB␣ binds to p50-p65, sequesters the transcription factors in the cytoplasm rendering them inactive. On stimulation of the IKK complex, IB␣ is phosphorylated at Ser32 and Ser36, resulting in its polyubiquitination and degradation, 9-11 thus resulting in nuclear accumulation of the complex and transcri...
MLN4924 is a first-in-class experimental cancer drug that inhibits the NEDD8-activating enzyme, thereby inhibiting cullin-RING E3 ubiquitin ligases and stabilizing many cullin substrates. The mechanism by which MLN4924 inhibits cancer cell proliferation has not been defined, although it is accompanied by DNA rereplication and attendant DNA damage. Here we show that stabilization of the DNA replication factor Cdt1, a substrate of cullins 1 and 4, is critical for MLN4924 to trigger DNA rereplication and inhibit cell proliferation. Even only 1 hour of exposure to MLN4924, which was sufficient to elevate Cdt1 for 4-5 hours, was found to be sufficient to induce DNA rereplication and to activate apoptosis and senescence pathways. Cells in S phase were most susceptible, suggesting that MLN4924 will be most toxic on highly proliferating cancers. Although MLN4924-induced cell senescence seems to be dependent on induction of p53 and its downstream effector p21Waf1 , we found that p53 À/À and p21 À/À cells were even more susceptible than wild-type cells to MLN4924. Our results suggested that apoptosis, not senescence, might be more important for the antiproliferative effect of MLN4924. Furthermore, our findings show that transient exposure to this new investigational drug should be useful for controlling p53-negative cancer cells, which often pose significant clinical challenge.
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