The effect of the potent and selective poly(ADP-ribose) (PAR) polymerase-1 [and PAR polymerase-2] inhibitor CEP-8983 on the ability to sensitize chemoresistant glioblastoma (RG2), rhabdomyosarcoma (RH18), neuroblastoma (NB1691), and colon carcinoma (HT29) tumor cells to temozolomide-and camptothecin-induced cytotoxicity, DNA damage, and G 2 -M arrest and on the potentiation of chemotherapy-induced myelotoxicity was evaluated using in vitro assays. In addition, the effect of the prodrug CEP-9722 in combination with temozolomide and/or irinotecan on PAR accumulation and tumor growth was also determined using glioblastoma and/or colon carcinoma xenografts relative to chemotherapy alone. CEP-8983 sensitized carcinoma cells to the growth-inhibitory effects of temozolomide and/or SN38 increased the fraction of and/ or lengthened duration of time tumor cells accumulated in chemotherapy-induced G 2 -M arrest and sensitized tumor cells to chemotherapy-induced DNA damage and apoptosis. A granulocyte-macrophage colony-forming unit colony formation assay showed that coincubation of CEP-8983 with temozolomide or topotecan did not potentiate chemotherapy-associated myelotoxicity. CEP-9722 (136 mg/kg) administered with temozolomide (68 mg/kg for 5 days) or irinotecan (10 mg/kg for 5 days) inhibited significantly the growth of RG2 tumors (60%) or HT29 tumors (80%) compared with temozolomide or irinotecan monotherapy, respectively. In addition, CEP-9722 showed ''stand alone'' antitumor efficacy in these preclinical xenografts. In vivo biochemical efficacy studies showed that CEP-9722 attenuated PAR accumulation in glioma xenografts in a dose-and time-related manner. These data indicate that CEP-8983 and its prodrug are effective chemosensitizing agents when administered in combination with select chemotherapeutic agents against chemoresistant tumors. [Mol Cancer Ther 2007;6(8):2290-302]
Telomere length maintenance is essential for cellular immortalization, and thus tumorigenesis. Most human tumors and immortal cell lines maintain their telomeric DNA via the activity of a specialized reverse transcriptase, telomerase. Stabilization of telomeric repeat tracts may also be achieved through a telomerase-independent mechanism, referred to as alternative lengthening of telomeres (ALT). ALT cells are telomerase negative and are characterized by extremely long and heterogeneously sized telomeres and novel multiprotein structures called ALT-associated PML nuclear bodies which are unique to ALT cells. To determine if reconstitution of telomerase activity suppressed ALT and restored wild-type telomere lengths, we introduced the catalytic subunit of telomerase into two ALT cell lines. Initially, two clonal lines exhibited enrichment of shorter telomeres while maintaining a population of ultra-long telomeres similar to that observed in the parental line, suggesting that telomerase is stabilizing the shorter telomeres in the population. Telomere length in the third clonal line was not detectably different from that in the parental cell line. One clonal line with a phenotype of shorter telomeres maintained this pattern over time in culture while the second gradually reverted to the parental ALT telomere length pattern, concurrent with reduction of telomerase activity. All clones continued to maintain ALT-associated PML nuclear bodies regardless of whether telomerase was present. The data suggest that introduction of telomerase activity alone is not sufficient to completely repress ALT, that telomerase acts preferentially on the shortest telomeres in the culture and that the ALT and telomerase pathways may be present concurrently in mammalian cells.
Telomere maintenance is essential for the unlimited proliferative potential of human cells, and hence immortalization. However, a number of tumors, tumor-derived cell lines and in vitro immortalized cell lines have been described that do not express detectable telomerase activity. These lines utilize a mechanism, termed Alternative Lengthening of Telomeres (ALT), to provide telomere maintenance. A subset of the cells in each ALT cell line contain a novel form of the promyelocytic leukemia nuclear body (PML NB) in which telomeric DNA and the telomere binding proteins TRF1 and TRF2 co-localize with the PML protein, termed ALT-associated PML bodies (AA-PBs). In contrast, in non-ALT, telomerase-positive cell lines these telomeric proteins and the PML NB occupy distinct and separate subnuclear domains. PML NBs have been implicated in terminal differentiation, growth suppression and apoptosis. The role, if any, of AA-PBs in telomere maintenance or culture viability in telomerase negative cell lines is unclear, but it has been suggested that cells containing these structures are no longer viable and are marked for eventual death. We utilized a series of human ovarian surface epithelium (HOSE) cell lines that use ALT for telomere maintenance to determine if AA-PBs are indeed markers of cells in these cultures that are no longer cycling. We show that AA-PB positive cells incorporate BrdU and thus are able to carry out DNA replication. In addition, AA-PBs are present in mitotic cells and the frequency of cells containing these structures is increased when cultures are enriched for cells in the G(2)/M phase of the cell cycle suggesting that the formation of AA-PBs is coordinately regulated with the cell cycle. Finally, we demonstrate that the majority of the AA-PB positive cells in the culture are not destined for immediate apoptosis. Taken together the data argue against AA-PBs marking cells destined for death and, instead, raise the possibility that these structures may be actively involved in telomere maintenance via the ALT pathway.
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