4.8 Article

Quinazoline Ligands Induce Cancer Cell Death through Selective STAT3 Inhibition and G-Quadruplex Stabilization

期刊

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
卷 142, 期 6, 页码 2876-2888

出版社

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.9b11232

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资金

  1. Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation
  2. Swedish Society for Medical Research
  3. Swedish Research Council
  4. Medical Faculty of Umea University
  5. Wenner-Gren Foundation
  6. Kempe Foundations [SMK-1632]
  7. Ake Wiberg Foundation
  8. Swedish Cancer Society
  9. JSPS Overseas Research Fellowships
  10. MIMS Excellence by Choice Postdoctoral Programme
  11. Swedish Society of Medicine [SLS-786661]
  12. federal funds through the county council of Vasterbotten [VLL-643451, VLL-832001]
  13. Cancer Research Foundation in Northern Sweden [LP 18-2202]
  14. Swedish Foundation for International Cooperation in Research and Higher Education [PT201S-6432]
  15. Sjoberg Foundation
  16. HORIZON 2020-MSC Individual fellowship [751474]
  17. Biochemical Imaging Center at Umea University
  18. National Microscopy Infrastructure [VR-RFI 2016-00968]

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The signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 (STAT3) protein is a master regulator of most key hallmarks and enablers of cancer, including cell proliferation and the response to DNA damage. G-Quadruplex (G4) structures are four-stranded noncanonical DNA structures enriched at telomeres and oncogenes' promoters. In cancer cells, stabilization of G4 DNAs leads to replication stress and DNA damage accumulation and is therefore considered a promising target for oncotherapy. Here, we designed and synthesized novel quinazoline-based compounds that simultaneously and selectively affect these two well-recognized cancer targets, G4 DNA structures and the STAT3 protein. Using a combination of in vitro assays, NMR, and molecular dynamics simulations, we show that these small, uncharged compounds not only bind to the STAT3 protein but also stabilize G4 structures. In human cultured cells, the compounds inhibit phosphorylation-dependent activation of STAT3 without affecting the antiapoptotic factor STAT1 and cause increased formation of G4 structures, as revealed by the use of a G4 DNA-specific antibody. As a result, treated cells show slower DNA replication, DNA damage checkpoint activation, and an increased apoptotic rate. Importantly, cancer cells are more sensitive to these molecules compared to noncancerous cell lines. This is the first report of a promising class of compounds that not only targets the DNA damage cancer response machinery but also simultaneously inhibits the STAT3-induced cancer cell proliferation, demonstrating a novel approach in cancer therapy.

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