During a cellular screening of thiocolchicine analogs, thiocolchicine dimers resulted particularly active in cisplatin-resistant A2780-CIS cells. In order to discover by which mechanism(s) thiocolchicine dimers overcame cisplatin resistance, p53, p21waf1 and MLH1 were assessed by Western blot. Results pointed out that, when combined with cisplatin, dimers increased the amount of all the three proteins with respect to the levels obtained by single drug exposure, thereby suggesting an interference in the process of repair of the cisplatin-induced DNA lesions. Moreover, in isolated nuclei drugs were able to produce DNA breaks, as demonstrated by Comet assay, thereby proving that the compounds were able to target cell nucleus independently from microtubules. Since Topo-I (topoisomerase I) is directly involved in the DNA repair and such activity is overexpressed in cisplatin-resistant cells, Topo-I was investigated as a potential target. Using DNA relaxation assay, thiocolchicine dimers inhibited Topo-I, a property not shared by thiocolchicine. At variance with camptothecin, dimers did not produce cleavable complexes, thereby indicating that Topo-I inhibition occurs upstream of the religation step. To assess the mechanism of inhibition, an electrophoretic mobility shift assay between DNA and Topo-I was performed and revealed that thiocolchicine dimers specifically interfere with binding of Topo-I to DNA. The interference is specific since the same compounds did not modulate DNase activity and did not act as intercalating agents in the DNA unwinding assay. Finally, behaviour of dimers as spindle poisons was investigated and no relevant changes with respect to thiocolchicine in terms of interaction with microtubules were found

Raspaglio, G., Ferlini, C., Mozzetti, S., Prislei, S., Gallo, D., Das, N., Scambia, G., Thiocolchicine dimers: a novel class of topoisomerase-I inhibitors, <<BIOCHEMICAL PHARMACOLOGY>>, 2005; (Gennaio): 113-121 [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/198370]

Thiocolchicine dimers: a novel class of topoisomerase-I inhibitors

Raspaglio, Giuseppina;Ferlini, Cristiano;Mozzetti, Simona;Gallo, Daniela;Scambia, Giovanni
2005

Abstract

During a cellular screening of thiocolchicine analogs, thiocolchicine dimers resulted particularly active in cisplatin-resistant A2780-CIS cells. In order to discover by which mechanism(s) thiocolchicine dimers overcame cisplatin resistance, p53, p21waf1 and MLH1 were assessed by Western blot. Results pointed out that, when combined with cisplatin, dimers increased the amount of all the three proteins with respect to the levels obtained by single drug exposure, thereby suggesting an interference in the process of repair of the cisplatin-induced DNA lesions. Moreover, in isolated nuclei drugs were able to produce DNA breaks, as demonstrated by Comet assay, thereby proving that the compounds were able to target cell nucleus independently from microtubules. Since Topo-I (topoisomerase I) is directly involved in the DNA repair and such activity is overexpressed in cisplatin-resistant cells, Topo-I was investigated as a potential target. Using DNA relaxation assay, thiocolchicine dimers inhibited Topo-I, a property not shared by thiocolchicine. At variance with camptothecin, dimers did not produce cleavable complexes, thereby indicating that Topo-I inhibition occurs upstream of the religation step. To assess the mechanism of inhibition, an electrophoretic mobility shift assay between DNA and Topo-I was performed and revealed that thiocolchicine dimers specifically interfere with binding of Topo-I to DNA. The interference is specific since the same compounds did not modulate DNase activity and did not act as intercalating agents in the DNA unwinding assay. Finally, behaviour of dimers as spindle poisons was investigated and no relevant changes with respect to thiocolchicine in terms of interaction with microtubules were found
2005
Inglese
Raspaglio, G., Ferlini, C., Mozzetti, S., Prislei, S., Gallo, D., Das, N., Scambia, G., Thiocolchicine dimers: a novel class of topoisomerase-I inhibitors, <<BIOCHEMICAL PHARMACOLOGY>>, 2005; (Gennaio): 113-121 [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/198370]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10807/198370
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