4.6 Article

A Novel Salt Inducible Kinase 2 Inhibitor, ARN-3261, Sensitizes Ovarian Cancer Cell Lines and Xenografts to Carboplatin

Journal

CANCERS
Volume 13, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cancers13030446

Keywords

salt inducible kinase 2 (SIK2); PARP inhibitor; carboplatin sensitivity; γ -H2AX; comet assay; apoptosis

Categories

Funding

  1. Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas [RP110595-P1]
  2. National Cancer Institute [R01 CA 135354]
  3. MD Anderson Specialized Program of Research Excellence in Ovarian Cancer (National Cancer Institute) [P50 CA 83639, CA 217685]
  4. Shared Resources of the MD Anderson Cancer Center Support Grant (National Cancer Institute) [P30 CA16672]
  5. National Foundation for Cancer Research
  6. Ann and Henry Zarrow Foundation
  7. Mossy Foundation
  8. Roberson Endowment
  9. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81300552]

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The study reveals that ARN-3261 can enhance the efficacy of paclitaxel and carboplatin in treating ovarian cancer by increasing their ability to kill cancer cells and decreasing survivin levels. Further clinical evaluation of ARN-3261 is warranted based on these preclinical findings.
Simple Summary Carboplatin and paclitaxel constitute first-line treatment for ovarian cancer, producing tumor shrinkage in 70% of patients, but curing less than 20% with advanced stage disease. Previous studies have shown that treatment with ARN-3261, a small molecule inhibitor of the enzyme salt-induced kinase 2, can improve the response to paclitaxel in human ovarian cancer cells grown in culture and in immunocompromised mice. Here we have found that ARN-3261 also increases carboplatin's ability to kill ovarian cancer cells grown in culture and in immunocompromised mice, causing additional DNA damage and decreasing levels of survivin, a protein that protects cancer cells from programmed cell death. Our studies encourage clinical evaluation of ARN-3261 and a Phase I clinical trial has been initiated to test the drug in ovarian cancer patients. Salt-induced kinase 2 (SIK2) is a serine-threonine kinase that regulates centrosome splitting, activation of PI3 kinase and phosphorylation of class IIa HDACs, affecting gene expression. Previously, we found that inhibition of SIK2 enhanced sensitivity of ovarian cancer cells to paclitaxel. Carboplatin and paclitaxel constitute first-line therapy for most patients with ovarian carcinoma, producing a 70% clinical response rate, but curing <20% of patients with advanced disease. We have asked whether inhibition of SIK2 with ARN-3261 enhances sensitivity to carboplatin in ovarian cancer cell lines and xenograft models. ARN-3261-induced DNA damage and apoptosis were measured with gamma-H2AX accumulation, comet assays, and annexin V. ARN-3261 inhibited growth of eight ovarian cancer cell lines at an IC50 of 0.8 to 3.5 mu M. ARN-3261 significantly enhanced sensitivity to carboplatin in seven of eight ovarian cancer cell lines and a carboplatin-resistant cell line tested. Furthermore, ARN-3261 in combination with carboplatin produced greater inhibition of tumor growth than carboplatin alone in SKOv3 and OVCAR8 ovarian cancer xenograft models. ARN-3261 enhanced DNA damage and apoptosis by downregulating expression of survivin. Thus, a SIK2 kinase inhibitor enhanced carboplatin-induced therapy in preclinical models of ovarian cancer and deserves further evaluation in clinical trials.

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