4.8 Article

Mechanisms of mitotic cell death induced by chemotherapy-mediated G(2) checkpoint abrogation

Journal

CANCER RESEARCH
Volume 67, Issue 1, Pages 339-345

Publisher

AMER ASSOC CANCER RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-06-2548

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The novel concept of anticancer treatment termed G(2) checkpoint abrogation aims to target p53-deficient tumor cells and is currently explored in clinical trials. The anticancer drug UCN-01 is used to abrogate a DNA damage-induced G(2) cell cycle arrest leading to mitotic entry and subsequent cell death, which is poorly defined as mitotic cell death or mitotic catastrophe. We show here that UCN-01 treatment results in a mitotic arrest that requires an active mitotic spindle checkpoint, involving the function of Mad2, Bub1, BubR1, Mps1, Aurora B, and survivin. During the mitotic arrest, hallmark parameters of the mitochondria-associated apoptosis pathway become activated. Interestingly, this apoptotic response requires the spindle checkpoint protein Mad2, suggesting a proapoptotic function for Mad2. However, although survivin and Aurora B are also required for the mitotic arrest, both proteins are part of an antiapoptotic pathway that restrains the UCN-01-induced apoptosis by promoting hyperphosphorylation of Bcl-2 and by inhibiting the activation of Bax. Consequently, inhibition of the antiapoptotic pathway by genetic ablation of survivin or by pharmacologic inhibitors of Aurora B or cyclin-dependent kinase 1 lead to a significant enhancement of apoptosis and therefore act synergistically with UCN-01. Thus, by defining the mechanism of cell death on G2 checkpoint abrogation we show a highly improved strategy for an anticancer treatment by the combined use of UCN-01 with abrogators of the survivin/Aurora B-dependent antiapoptotic pathway that retains the selectivity for p53-defective cancer cells.

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