4.3 Article

New HSP27 inhibitors efficiently suppress drug resistance development in cancer cells

Journal

ONCOTARGET
Volume 7, Issue 42, Pages 68156-68169

Publisher

IMPACT JOURNALS LLC
DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.11905

Keywords

drug repositioning; drug repurposing; HSPB1; BVDU; binding site

Funding

  1. BMBF project Bioresponsive materials
  2. saxon/EU project SigSax II

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Drug resistance is an important open problem in cancer treatment. In recent years, the heat shock protein HSP27 (HSPB1) was identified as a key player driving resistance development. HSP27 is overexpressed in many cancer types and influences cellular processes such as apoptosis, DNA repair, recombination, and formation of metastases. As a result cancer cells are able to suppress apoptosis and develop resistance to cytostatic drugs. To identify HSP27 inhibitors we follow a novel computational drug repositioning approach. We exploit a similarity between a predicted HSP27 binding site to a viral thymidine kinase to generate lead inhibitors for HSP27. Six of these leads were verified experimentally. They bind HSP27 and down-regulate its chaperone activity. Most importantly, all six compounds inhibit development of drug resistance in cellular assays. One of the leads - chlorpromazine - is an antipsychotic, which has a positive effect on survival time in human breast cancer. In summary, we make two important contributions: First, we put forward six novel leads, which inhibit HSP27 and tackle drug resistance. Second, we demonstrate the power of computational drug repositioning.

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