4.7 Article

A novel moniliformin derivative as pan-inhibitor of histone deacetylases triggering apoptosis of leukemia cells

Journal

BIOCHEMICAL PHARMACOLOGY
Volume 194, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.bcp.2021.114677

Keywords

Apoptosis; Histone deacetylases; Leukemia; Multidrug resistance; P-glycoprotein; Zebrafish

Funding

  1. Chinese Scholarship Council (CSC)
  2. Ministry of Higher Education and Scientific Research
  3. Genomics and Proteomics Core Facility at the German Cancer Research Center
  4. Al-Neelain University, Khartoum, Sudan

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MCC1381 is a moniliformin derivative that bypasses P-gp-mediated multidrug resistance, affects cell cycle and cellular death, and potentially inhibits histone deacetylases. In vitro studies show strong affinity of MCC1381 to HDAC6, leading to decreased expression and increased acetylation of HDAC6 substrates. Animal studies demonstrate anti-cancer activity of MCC1381 in xenografted zebrafish, suggesting its potential as a novel candidate for cancer therapy.
New and potent agents that evade multidrug resistance (MDR) and inhibit epigenetic modifications are of great interest in cancer drug development. Here, we describe that a moniliformin derivative (IUPAC name: 3-(naphthalen-2-ylsulfanyl)-4-{[(2Z)-1,3,3-trimethyl-2,3-dihydro-1H-indol-2-ylidene]methyl}cyclobut-3-ene-1,2-dione; code: MCC1381) bypasses P-gp-mediated MDR. Using transcriptomics, we identified a large number of genes significantly regulated in response to MCC1381, which affected the cell cycle and disturbed cellular death and survival. The potential targets of MCC1381 might be histone deacetylases (HDACs) as predicted by SwissTargetPrediction. In silico studies confirmed that MCC1381 presented comparable affinity with HDAC1, 2, 3, 6, 8 and 11. Besides, the inhibition activity of HDACs was dose-dependently inhibited by MCC1381. Particularly, a strong binding affinity was observed between MCC1381 and HDAC6 by microscale thermophoresis analysis. MCC1381 decreased the expression of HDAC6, inversely correlated with the increase of acetylated HDAC6 substrates, acetylation p53 and alpha-tubulin. Furthermore, MCC1381 arrested the cell cycle at the G2/M phase, induced the generation of reactive oxygen species and collapse of the mitochondrial membrane potential. MCC1381 exhibited in vivo anti-cancer activity in xenografted zebrafish. Collectively, MCC1381 extended cytotoxicity towards P-gp-resistant leukemia cancer cells and may act as a pan-HDACs inhibitor, indicating that MCC1381 is a novel candidate for cancer therapy.

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