Abstract
Abstract Quiescent cancer cells in vivo, including stem cell populations, are relatively insensitive to most chemotherapeutic drugs and radiation. Tumor cells in culture can be placed in G0 by serum or nutrient deprivation, and then can be targeted by a small molecule Mirk kinase inhibitor. Mirk/dyrk1B levels are elevated up to 10-fold in quiescent tumor cells where Mirk blocks cell cycling and increases viability by decreasing reactive oxygen species (ROS). In prior studies Mirk was detected in 75% of ovarian cancers, and was amplified in a subset. In contrast, Mirk expression was quite low in most normal cell types and Mirk knockout or depletion had no detectable effects on normal cells. Response to a Mirk kinase inhibitor was compared between two strains of normal diploid fibroblasts, early passage cultures of normal human ovarian epithelial cells, and a series of ovarian cancer cell lines where Mirk had been shown to be an active kinase. Serum-starved normal diploid cells entered a G0 quiescent state and had minimal response to the Mirk inhibitor, but serum-starved cancer cells were kept in cycle by the Mirk inhibitor, which reduced E2F4 sequestration by p130/Rb2 by 2-3fold. Mirk inhibitor treated cancer cultures had several-fold more sub-G0/G1 apoptotic cells and about 30-fold higher levels of the apoptotic proteins cleaved PARP and cleaved caspase 3 compared with normal diploid cells. The Mirk inhibitor increased total ROS levels and superoxide levels only in the cancer cells, in a rapid time-course of 2-3 days. Cancer cell loss after Mirk kinase inhibitor treatment was due at least in part to ROS, since the ROS scavenger N-acetyl cysteine reduced the amount of cleaved PARP and the extent of cancer cell loss. The Mirk inhibitor decreased the EC50 of cisplatin up to 9-fold in ovarian cancer cells. Thus ovarian cancer cells, which exhibit elevated Mirk expression/amplification and active Mirk kinase, were shown to be more susceptible to the Mirk kinase inhibitor than normal diploid cells. Citation Format: {Authors}. {Abstract title} [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 103rd Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research; 2012 Mar 31-Apr 4; Chicago, IL. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2012;72(8 Suppl):Abstract nr 2858. doi:1538-7445.AM2012-2858
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