Suppression of survivin phosphorylation on Thr34 by flavopiridol enhances tumor cell apoptosis
Wall, Nathan R. ; O'Connor, Daniel S. ; Plescia, Janet ; Pommier, Yves ; Altieri, Dario C.
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Keywords
Apoptosis
Breast Neoplasms
Doxorubicin
Female
Flavonoids
Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic
Hela Cells
Humans
Microtubule-Associated Proteins
inhibitors
Neoplasm Proteins
Paclitaxel
Phosphorylation
Phosphothreonine
Piperidines
RNA, Messenger
Tumor Cells, Cultured
Ultraviolet Rays
Cancer Biology
Oncology
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Abstract
Survivin is a member of the inhibitor of apoptosis gene family that is expressed in most human cancers and may facilitate evasion from apoptosis and aberrant mitotic progression. Here, exposure of breast carcinoma MCF-7 or cervical carcinoma HeLa cells to anticancer agents, including Adriamycin, Taxol, or UVB resulted in a 4-5-fold increased survivin expression. Changes in survivin levels after anticancer treatment did not involve modulation of survivin mRNA expression and were independent of de novo gene transcription. Conversely, inhibition of survivin phosphorylation on Thr(34) by the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor flavopiridol resulted in loss of survivin expression, and nonphosphorylatable survivin Thr(34)-->Ala exhibited accelerated clearance as compared with wild-type survivin. Sequential ablation of survivin phosphorylation on Thr(34) enhanced tumor cell apoptosis induced by anticancer agents independently of p53 and suppressed tumor growth without toxicity in a breast cancer xenograft model in vivo. These data suggest that Thr(34) phosphorylation critically regulates survivin levels in tumor cells and that sequential ablation of p34(cdc2) kinase activity may remove the survivin viability checkpoint and enhance apoptosis in tumor cells.
Source
Cancer Res. 2003 Jan 1;63(1):230-5.