Abstract

The dioxonapthoimidazolium YM155 is a survivin suppressant which has been investigated as an anticancer agent in clinical trials. Here, we investigated its growth inhibitory properties on a panel of immortalized and patient derived renal cell carcinoma (RCC) cell lines which were either deficient in the tumour suppressor von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) protein or possessed a functional copy. Neither the VHL status nor the survivin expression levels of these cell lines influenced their susceptibility to growth inhibition by YM155. Of the various RCC lines, the papillary subtype was more resistant to YM155, suggesting that the therapeutic efficacy of YM155 may be restricted to clear cell subtypes. YM155 was equally potent in cells (RCC786.0) in which survivin expression had been stably silenced or overexpressed, implicating a limited reliance on survivin in the mode of action of YM155. A follow-up in-vitro high throughput RNA microarray identified possible targets of YM155 apart from survivin. Selected genes (ID1, FOXO1, CYLD) that were differentially expressed in YM155-sensitive RCC cells and relevant to RCC pathology were validated with real-time PCR and western immunoblotting analyses. Thus, there is corroboratory evidence that the growth inhibitory activity of YM155 in RCC cell lines is not exclusively mediated by its suppression of survivin. In view of the growing importance of combination therapy in oncology, we showed that a combination of YM155 and sorafenib at ½ x IC50 concentrations was synergistic on RCC786.0 cells. However, when tested intraperitoneally on a murine xenograft model derived from a nephrectomised patient with clear cell RCC, a combination of suboptimal doses of both drugs failed to arrest tumour progression. The absence of synergy in vivo highlighted the need to further optimize the dosing schedules of YM155 and sorafenib, as well as their routes of administration. It also implied that the expression of other oncogenic proteins which YM155 may target is either low or absent in this clear cell RCC.

Highlights

  • Renal cell carcinoma (RCC) is a lethal form of genitourinary cancer that is notoriously resistant to traditional cytotoxic chemotherapy and radiotherapy [1]

  • We first determined the levels of survivin in a panel of human clear cell RCC cell lines comprising a patient-derived cell line NCC010 and an isogenic pair (RCC786.0/EV, RCC786.0/ von Hippel-Lindau gene (VHL).HA)

  • Immunoblotting with anti-HA-tagged antibody confirmed the VHL status of RCC786.0/EV which is VHL-null whereas its isogenic derivative RCC786.0/ VHL.HA is VHL positive (Fig 1A)

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Summary

Introduction

Renal cell carcinoma (RCC) is a lethal form of genitourinary cancer that is notoriously resistant to traditional cytotoxic chemotherapy and radiotherapy [1]. Clear cell RCC is either sporadic (>96%) or familial (< 4%) [2,3]. The pathology of clear cell RCC is critically dependent on the tumour suppressor von Hippel-Lindau gene (VHL), whose protein product regulates cellular responses to hypoxia [4]. Survivin expression is linked to suppression of apoptosis, metastasis, by-pass of cell cycle checkpoints and resistance to chemotherapy [11,12,13]. Though YM155 is not a specific survivin suppressant, it should not detract from the fact that it is a potent and well tolerated anti-cancer candidate [26,27,28], with the potential to enhance the efficacies of established anticancer drugs when used in combination. We hypothesized that YM155 intercepts other molecular targets apart from survivin to bring about growth inhibition of RCC

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