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Centrosome-declustering drugs mediate a two-pronged attack on interphase and mitosis in supercentrosomal cancer cells
Authors:V Pannu  P C G Rida  B Celik  R C Turaga  A Ogden  G Cantuaria  J Gopalakrishnan  R Aneja
Affiliation:1.Department of Biology, Georgia State University, Atlanta, GA, USA;2.University of Gynecologic Oncology, Northside Hospital Cancer Institute, Atlanta, GA, USA;3.Center for Molecular Medicine of the University of Cologne, Cologne, Germany
Abstract:Classical anti-mitotic drugs have failed to translate their preclinical efficacy into clinical response in human trials. Their clinical failure has challenged the notion that tumor cells divide frequently at rates comparable to those of cancer cells in vitro and in xenograft models. Given the preponderance of interphase cells in clinical tumors, we asked whether targeting amplified centrosomes, which cancer cells carefully preserve in a tightly clustered conformation throughout interphase, presents a superior chemotherapeutic strategy that sabotages interphase-specific cellular activities, such as migration. Herein we have utilized supercentrosomal N1E-115 murine neuroblastoma cells as a test-bed to study interphase centrosome declustering induced by putative declustering agents, such as Reduced-9-bromonoscapine (RedBr-Nos), Griseofulvin and PJ-34. We found tight ‘supercentrosomal'' clusters in the interphase and mitosis of ~80% of patients'' tumor cells with excess centrosomes. RedBr-Nos was the strongest declustering agent with a declustering index of 0.36 and completely dispersed interphase centrosome clusters in N1E-115 cells. Interphase centrosome declustering caused inhibition of neurite formation, impairment of cell polarization and Golgi organization, disrupted cellular protrusions and focal adhesion contacts—factors that are crucial prerequisites for directional migration. Thus our data illustrate an interphase-specific potential anti-migratory role of centrosome-declustering agents in addition to their previously acknowledged ability to induce spindle multipolarity and mitotic catastrophe. Centrosome-declustering agents counter centrosome clustering to inhibit directional cell migration in interphase cells and set up multipolar mitotic catastrophe, suggesting that disbanding the nuclear–centrosome–Golgi axis is a potential anti-metastasis strategy.Unlike in vitro cell cultures, cancer cells in patients'' tumor tissues have low mitotic indices and proliferation rates.1 Consequently, drugs targeting mitosis demonstrate limited clinical efficacy, which exposes a fundamental weakness in the rationale underlying their clinical development. By contrast, classical microtubule-targeting agents (MTAs), largely believed to act by perturbing mitosis, remain the mainstay of chemotherapy in the clinic. Given the miniscule population of mitotic cells in patient tumors,2, 3 it stands to reason that MTAs must target interphase.4 This paradigm shift has spurred an intense search for novel interphase targets that combine the ‘ideal'' attributes of cancer-cell selectivity and the ability to confer vulnerability on a large proportion of tumor cells.Centrosomes, the major microtubule-organizing centers (MTOCs) of cells, are required for accurate cell division, cell motility and cilia formation.5 The number of centrosomes within a cell is strictly controlled, and their duplication occurs only once per cell cycle. Nearly all types of cancer cells have abnormal numbers of centrosomes,6, 7, 8 which correlates with chromosomal instability during tumorigenesis.9, 10, 11 Supernumerary centrosomes in cancer cells can cause spindle multipolarity and thus non-viable progeny. Cancer cells avoid this outcome by clustering centrosomes to assemble a pseudo-bipolar mitotic spindle, which yields viable daughter cells.12 Thus disrupting centrosome clustering may selectively drive cancer cells with amplified centrosomes to mitotic catastrophe and apoptosis without affecting normal cells.The fate and interphase role of the supercentrosomal cluster inherited by each daughter cell at the end of a pseudobipolar mitosis is unknown. This is an important research question, because a majority of cells within tumors are in interphase and the centrosomes'' command over microtubule nucleation is crucial for the cellular organization and motility in interphase. If cancer cells cluster centrosomes in interphase, then disrupting the cluster could impact interphase-specific processes, opening up a vital therapeutic avenue. We envision that centrosome declustering would (a) derail interphase-specific polarization and migration processes and (b) precipitate multipolar mitosis culminating in apoptosis. This two-pronged strategy would impact a significantly larger proportion of tumor cells and consign them to death. Our study herein establishes that centrosome-declustering drugs (RedBr-Nos, Griseofulvin and PJ-34) achieve this two-pronged attack as a unique class of agents that exhibit multiple cellular activities.
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