Oxidative phosphorylation-dependent regulation of cancer cell apoptosis in response to anticancer agents

被引:0
|
作者
N Yadav
S Kumar
T Marlowe
A K Chaudhary
R Kumar
J Wang
J O'Malley
P M Boland
S Jayanthi
T K S Kumar
N Yadava
D Chandra
机构
[1] Roswell Park Cancer Institute,Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics
[2] Roswell Park Cancer Institute,Department of Biostatistics and Bioinformatics
[3] Roswell Park Cancer Institute,Department of Medicine
[4] University of Arkansas,Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
[5] Pioneer Valley Life Sciences Institute,undefined
来源
Cell Death & Disease | 2015年 / 6卷
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Cancer cells tend to develop resistance to various types of anticancer agents, whether they adopt similar or distinct mechanisms to evade cell death in response to a broad spectrum of cancer therapeutics is not fully defined. Current study concludes that DNA-damaging agents (etoposide and doxorubicin), ER stressor (thapsigargin), and histone deacetylase inhibitor (apicidin) target oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) for apoptosis induction, whereas other anticancer agents including staurosporine, taxol, and sorafenib induce apoptosis in an OXPHOS-independent manner. DNA-damaging agents promoted mitochondrial biogenesis accompanied by increased accumulation of cellular and mitochondrial ROS, mitochondrial protein-folding machinery, and mitochondrial unfolded protein response. Induction of mitochondrial biogenesis occurred in a caspase activation-independent mechanism but was reduced by autophagy inhibition and p53-deficiency. Abrogation of complex-I blocked DNA-damage-induced caspase activation and apoptosis, whereas inhibition of complex-II or a combined deficiency of OXPHOS complexes I, III, IV, and V due to impaired mitochondrial protein synthesis did not modulate caspase activity. Mechanistic analysis revealed that inhibition of caspase activation in response to anticancer agents associates with decreased release of mitochondrial cytochrome c in complex-I-deficient cells compared with wild type (WT) cells. Gross OXPHOS deficiencies promoted increased release of apoptosis-inducing factor from mitochondria compared with WT or complex-I-deficient cells, suggesting that cells harboring defective OXPHOS trigger caspase-dependent as well as caspase-independent apoptosis in response to anticancer agents. Interestingly, DNA-damaging agent doxorubicin showed strong binding to mitochondria, which was disrupted by complex-I-deficiency but not by complex-II-deficiency. Thapsigargin-induced caspase activation was reduced upon abrogation of complex-I or gross OXPHOS deficiency whereas a reverse trend was observed with apicidin. Together, these finding provide a new strategy for differential mitochondrial targeting in cancer therapy.
引用
收藏
页码:e1969 / e1969
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Oxidative phosphorylation-dependent regulation of cancer cell apoptosis in response to anticancer agents
    Kumar, Sandeep
    Yadav, Neelu
    Marlowe, Tim
    Chaudhary, Ajay
    Wang, Jianmin
    O'Malley, Jordan
    Boland, Patrick
    Jayanthi, Srinivas
    Kumar, Thallapuranam Krishnaswamy Suresh
    Yadava, Nagendra
    Chandra, Dhyan
    CANCER RESEARCH, 2015, 75
  • [2] Oxidative phosphorylation-dependent regulation of cancer cell apoptosis in response to anticancer agents
    Yadav, N.
    Kumar, S.
    Marlowe, T.
    Chaudhary, A. K.
    Kumar, R.
    Wang, J.
    O'Malley, J.
    Boland, P. M.
    Jayanthi, S.
    Kumar, T. K. S.
    Yadava, N.
    Chandra, D.
    CELL DEATH & DISEASE, 2015, 6 : e1969 - e1969
  • [3] Phosphorylation-Dependent Regulation of the DNA Damage Response of Adaptor Protein KIBRA in Cancer Cells
    Mavuluri, Jayadev
    Beesetti, Swarnalatha
    Surabhi, Rohan
    Kremerskothen, Joachim
    Venkatraman, Ganesh
    Rayala, Suresh K.
    MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR BIOLOGY, 2016, 36 (09) : 1354 - 1365
  • [4] Phosphorylation-dependent regulation of septin dynamics during the cell cycle
    Dobbelaere, J
    Gentry, MS
    Hallberg, RL
    Barral, Y
    DEVELOPMENTAL CELL, 2003, 4 (03) : 345 - 357
  • [5] Phosphorylation-Dependent Regulation of Mammalian Aquaporins
    Nesverova, Veronika
    Tornroth-Horsefield, Susanna
    CELLS, 2019, 8 (02)
  • [6] PHOSPHORYLATION-DEPENDENT REGULATION OF LIMULUS MYOSIN
    SELLERS, JR
    JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY, 1981, 256 (17) : 9274 - 9278
  • [7] PHOSPHORYLATION-DEPENDENT REGULATION OF AXON FASCICULATION
    CERVELLO, M
    LEMMON, V
    LANDRETH, G
    RUTISHAUSER, U
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 1991, 88 (23) : 10548 - 10552
  • [8] Phosphorylation-dependent Akt cleavage in neural cell in vitro reconstitution of apoptosis
    François, F
    Grimes, ML
    JOURNAL OF NEUROCHEMISTRY, 1999, 73 (04) : 1773 - 1776
  • [9] Phosphorylation-Dependent Regulation of ESCO2
    Rankin, B.
    Chen, J.
    Flavors, D.
    Moore, V.
    Rankin, S.
    MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE CELL, 2023, 34 (02) : 1028 - 1028
  • [10] Transcriptional regulation by the phosphorylation-dependent factor CREB
    Mayr, B
    Montminy, M
    NATURE REVIEWS MOLECULAR CELL BIOLOGY, 2001, 2 (08) : 599 - 609