The combination of shRNA-mediated gene silencing with effective in vivo gene delivery strategies appears to generate a long-lasting silencing signal.
Cyclin B1 is the regulatory subunit of cyclin-dependent kinase 1 (Cdk1) and is critical for the initiation of mitosis. Accumulating data indicate that the deregulation of cyclin B1 is tightly linked to neoplastic transformation. To study the phenotype and the potential preclinical relevance, we generated HeLa cell lines stably transfected with the plasmids encompassing short hairpin RNA (shRNA) targeting cyclin B1. We demonstrate that the reduction of cyclin B1 caused inhibition of proliferation by arresting cells in G2 phase and by inducing apoptosis. Cells, entering mitosis, were impaired in chromosome condensation and alignment. Importantly, HeLa cells with reduced cyclin B1 were more susceptible to the treatment of small interfering RNA targeting Polo-like kinase 1 (Plk1) and to the administration of the chemotherapeutic agent taxol. Finally, HeLa cells with reduced cyclin B1 showed inhibited tumor growth in nude mice compared to that of control cells. In summary, our data indicate that cyclin B1 is an essential molecule for tumor cell survival and aggressive proliferation, suggesting that the downregulation of cyclin B1, especially in combination with other molecular targets, might become an interesting strategy for antitumor intervention.
High attrition rates of novel anti-cancer drugs highlight the need for improved models to predict toxicity. Although polo-like kinase 1 (Plk1) inhibitors are attractive candidates for drug development, the role of Plk1 in primary cells remains widely unexplored. Therefore, we evaluated the utility of an RNA interference-based model to assess responses to an inducible knockdown (iKD) of Plk1 in adult mice. Here we show that Plk1 silencing can be achieved in several organs, although adverse events are rare. We compared responses in Plk1-iKD mice with those in primary cells kept under controlled culture conditions. In contrast to the addiction of many cancer cell lines to the non-oncogene Plk1, the primary cells' proliferation, spindle assembly and apoptosis exhibit only a low dependency on Plk1. Responses to Plk1-depletion, both in cultured primary cells and in our iKD-mouse model, correspond well and thus provide the basis for using validated iKD mice in predicting responses to therapeutic interventions.
Caspase activation is a hallmark of apoptosis. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying the regulation of caspase-8 activation within the extrinsic death pathway are not well understood. In this study, we demonstrate that procaspase-8 is phosphorylated in mitotic cells by Cdk1/cyclin B1 on Ser-387, which is located at the N terminus of the catalytic subunit p10. This phosphorylation of procaspase-8 on Ser-387 occurs in cancer cell lines, as well as in primary breast tissues and lymphocytes. Furthermore, RNA interferencemediated silencing of cyclin B1 or treatment with the Cdk1 inhibitor RO-3306 enhances the Fas-mediated activation and processing of procaspase-8 in mitotic cells. A nonphosphorylatable procaspase-8 (S387A) facilitates Fas-induced apoptosis during mitosis. Our findings suggest that Cdk1/cyclin B1 activity shields human cells against extrinsic death stimuli and unravel the molecular details of the cross talk between cell cycle and extrinsic apoptotic pathways. Finally, this new mechanism may also contribute to tumorigenesis.Intact apoptotic machinery is essential to maintain the integrity and homeostasis of multicellular organisms (8). The evasion of apoptosis is a hallmark of cancer, as demonstrated by the inability of cancer cells to respond appropriately to signals that normally control unrestricted growth (11). In mammalian cells, the apoptotic response is mediated by either the intrinsic or the extrinsic pathway, depending on the origin of the death stimulus. After stimulation of the death receptor Fas (APO-1/CD95) the death-inducing signaling complex (DISC) assembles, which contains the oligomerized receptor, the adaptor molecule FADD, two isoforms of procaspase-8 (procaspase-8a and -8b), procaspase-10, and c-Flip L/S/R (28, 37). In accordance with the induced proximity model, immediately after DISC formation, procaspase-8, which consists of two death effector domains (DED) and a protease domain containing the p18 and p10 subunits, is proteolytically processed (28). This autoprocessing follows a sequential order of events: while the first cleavage step occurs at Asp-374 and results in the formation of the subunits p43/p41 and p12, the second cleavage at Asp-216 and Asp-384 produces the enzymatically active subunits p18, p10, and the prodomain p26/p24 (5, 14, 27, 40). The mature caspase-8 heterotetramer p18 2 -p10 2 then translocates from the DISC to the cytosol, where it cleaves several substrates, such as Bid, and effector caspases to initiate the apoptotic cascade (22).Increasing evidence highlights the functional importance of procaspase-8 for carcinogenesis; several findings suggest that the impairment of procaspase-8 function by genetic and epigenetic mechanisms correlates with the malignant potential of different types of cancer (6,12,43,44). In the present study, we investigated the functional correlation of the cell cycle with the extrinsic death pathway. The cyclin-dependent kinase 1 (Cdk1) in complex with cyclin B1 (Cdk1/cyclin B1) is one of the key mitotic kinases. The kinase ac...
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