TRAP1 (TNF receptor-associated protein), a member of the HSP90 chaperone family, is found predominantly in mitochondria. TRAP1 is broadly considered to be an anticancer molecular target. However, current inhibitors cannot distinguish between HSP90 and TRAP1, making their utility as probes of TRAP1-specific function questionable. Some cancers express less TRAP1 than do their normal tissue counterparts, suggesting that TRAP1 function in mitochondria of normal and transformed cells is more complex than previously appreciated. We have used TRAP1-null cells and transient TRAP1 silencing/overexpression to show that TRAP1 regulates a metabolic switch between oxidative phosphorylation and aerobic glycolysis in immortalized mouse fibroblasts and in human tumor cells. TRAP1-deficiency promotes an increase in mitochondrial respiration and fatty acid oxidation, and in cellular accumulation of tricarboxylic acid cycle intermediates, ATP and reactive oxygen species. At the same time, glucose metabolism is suppressed. TRAP1-deficient cells also display strikingly enhanced invasiveness. TRAP1 interaction with and regulation of mitochondrial c-Src provide a mechanistic basis for these phenotypes. Taken together with the observation that TRAP1 expression is inversely correlated with tumor grade in several cancers, these data suggest that, in some settings, this mitochondrial molecular chaperone may act as a tumor suppressor.M olecular chaperones help to maintain cellular homeostasis.The heat-shock protein 90 (HSP90) family of molecular chaperones is highly conserved from bacteria to mammals. HSP90 itself is an essential molecular chaperone found in the cytoplasm and nucleus of all eukaryotic cells (1, 2). In multicellular eukaryotes, the HSP90 family includes the mitochondrial chaperone TRAP1 (TNF receptor-associated protein), which shares 50% sequence similarity with HSP90. Although TRAP1 binds and hydrolyzes ATP in an analogous manner to HSP90 (3), its cellular function is less well understood. Thus, although many HSP90-dependent proteins ("clients") and interacting cochaperones have been described (www.picard.ch/downloads/Hsp90interactors.pdf), the validated list of TRAP1-dependent clients is quite small and TRAP1-interacting cochaperones, if they exist, have yet to be identified (4).Several studies have suggested that TRAP1 plays a cytoprotective role by buffering reactive oxygen species (ROS)-mediated oxidative stress (5, 6), and others have reported that TRAP1 overexpression attenuates ROS production (7). The antioxidant properties of TRAP1, together with its reported ability to regulate opening of the mitochondrial permeability transition pore (8, 9), may contribute to its antiapoptotic activity (4). For these reasons, TRAP1 has been proposed as an anticancer molecular target, and first-generation inhibitors have shown some anticancer activity in preclinical models (10). However, these inhibitors do not distinguish between HSP90 and TRAP1 (11), and TRAP1 expression in cancer is variable but HSP90 comprises as much as 5% of...
For metastatic bladder cancer patients, systemic cisplatin (CDDP)-based combination chemotherapy is the first-line choice of treatment. Although up to 70% of advanced bladder cancer patients initially show good tumor response to this form of combination chemotherapy, over 90% of good responders relapse and eventually die of the disease. According to the cancer stem cell theory, this phenomenon is attributable to the re-growth of bladder cancer-initiating cells (BCICs) that have survived chemotherapy. In this study, the authors have isolated BCICs from cultured human bladder cancer cells to analyze their sensitivity to CDDP and to investigate whether heat-shock protein 90 (Hsp90) inhibitors potentiate the cytotoxicity of CDDP on BCICs. First, the authors have confirmed that a CD441 subpopulation of 5637 cells met the requirements to be considered tumor-initiating cells. These BCICs were more resistant to CDDP and exhibited more activity in the Akt and ERK oncogenic signaling pathways when compared with their CD442 counterparts. The Hsp90 inhibitor 17-(dimethylaminoethylamino)-17-demethoxygeldanamycin (17-DMAG), which simultaneously inactivated both Akt and ERK signaling at noncytocidal concentrations, synergistically potentiated the cytotoxicity of CDDP against BCICs by enhancing CDDP-induced apoptosis in vitro. The potentiating effect of 17-DMAG was more effective than a combination of the two inhibitors specific for the Akt and ERK pathways. Finally, the authors have confirmed that, though human BCIC xenografts exhibited resistance to a single administration of CDDP and the Hsp90 inhibitor 17-(allylamino)-17-demethoxygeldanamycin (17-AAG), 17-AAG sensitized them to CDDP in a mouse model. These data encourage clinical trials of Hsp90 inhibitors as they may improve therapeutic outcomes of CDDP-based combination chemotherapy against advanced bladder cancer.
The two cytosolic/nuclear isoforms of the molecular chaperone HSP90, stress-inducible HSP90α and constitutively expressed HSP90β, fold, assemble and maintain the three-dimensional structure of numerous client proteins. Because many HSP90 clients are important in cancer, several HSP90 inhibitors have been evaluated in the clinic. However, little is known concerning possible unique isoform or conformational preferences of either individual HSP90 clients or inhibitors. In this report, we compare the relative interaction strength of both HSP90α and HSP90β with the transcription factors HSF1 and HIF1α, the kinases ERBB2 and MET, the E3-ubiquitin ligases KEAP1 and RHOBTB2, and the HSP90 inhibitors geldanamycin and ganetespib. We observed unexpected differences in relative client and drug preferences for the two HSP90 isoforms, with HSP90α binding each client protein with greater apparent affinity compared to HSP90β, while HSP90β bound each inhibitor with greater relative interaction strength compared to HSP90α. Stable HSP90 interaction was associated with reduced client activity. Using a defined set of HSP90 conformational mutants, we found that some clients interact strongly with a single, ATP-stabilized HSP90 conformation, only transiently populated during the dynamic HSP90 chaperone cycle, while other clients interact equally with multiple HSP90 conformations. These data suggest different functional requirements among HSP90 clientele that, for some clients, are likely to be ATP-independent. Lastly, the two inhibitors examined, although sharing the same binding site, were differentially able to access distinct HSP90 conformational states.
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