Proteasomes degrade most proteins in mammalian cells and are established targets of anti-cancer drugs. All eukaryotic proteasomes have three types of active sites: chymotrypsin-like, trypsin-like, and caspase-like. Chymotrypsin-like sites are the most important in protein degradation and are the primary target of most proteasome inhibitors. The biological roles of trypsin-like and caspase-like sites and their potential as co-targets of anti-neoplastic agents are not well defined. Here we describe the development of novel, site-specific inhibitors and active-site probes of chymotrypsin-like and caspase-like sites. Using these compounds, we show that cytotoxicity of proteasome inhibitors does not correlate with inhibition of chymotrypsin-like sites and that co-inhibition of either trypsin-like and/or caspase-like sites is needed to achieve maximal cytotoxicity. Thus, caspase-like and trypsin-like sites must be considered as co-targets of anti-cancer drugs.
The proteasome inhibitor bortezomib (Velcade) is prescribed for the treatment of multiple myeloma. Clinically achievable concentrations of bortezomib cause less than 85% inhibition of the chymotrypsin-like activity of the proteasome, but little attention has been paid as to whether in vitro studies are representative of this level of inhibition. Patients receive bortezomib as an intravenous or subcutaneous bolus injection, resulting in maximum proteasome inhibition within one hour followed by a gradual recovery of activity. In contrast, most in vitro studies use continuous treatment so that activity never recovers. Replacing continuous treatment with 1 h-pulse treatment increases differences in sensitivity in a panel of 7 multiple myeloma cell lines from 5.3-fold to 18-fold, and reveals that the more sensitive cell lines undergo apoptosis at faster rates. Clinically achievable inhibition of active sites was sufficient to induce cytotoxicity only in one cell line. At concentrations of bortezomib that produced similar inhibition of peptidase activities a different extent of inhibition of protein degradation was observed, providing an explanation for the differential sensitivity. The amount of protein degraded per number of active proteasomes correlated with sensitivity to bortezomib. Thus, (i) in vitro studies of proteasome inhibitors should be conducted at pharmacologically achievable concentrations and duration of treatment; (ii) a similar level of inhibition of active sites results in a different extent of inhibition of protein breakdown in different cell lines, and hence a difference in sensitivity.
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