Abstract

Apratoxin A is a natural product with potent antiproliferative activity against many human cancer cell lines. However, we and other investigators observed that it has a narrow therapeutic window in vivo Previous mechanistic studies have suggested its involvement in the secretory pathway as well as the process of chaperone-mediated autophagy. Still the link between the biologic activities of apratoxin A and its in vivo toxicity has remained largely unknown. A better understanding of this relationship is critically important for any further development of apratoxin A as an anticancer drug. Here, we describe a detailed pathologic analysis that revealed a specific pancreas-targeting activity of apratoxin A, such that severe pancreatic atrophy was observed in apratoxin A-treated animals. Follow-up tissue distribution studies further uncovered a unique drug distribution profile for apratoxin A, showing high drug exposure in pancreas and salivary gland. It has been shown previously that apratoxin A inhibits the protein secretory pathway by preventing cotranslational translocation. However, the molecule targeted by apratoxin A in this pathway has not been well defined. By using a (3)H-labeled apratoxin A probe and specific Sec 61α/β antibodies, we identified that the Sec 61 complex is the molecular target of apratoxin A. We conclude that apratoxin A in vivo toxicity is likely caused by pancreas atrophy due to high apratoxin A exposure. Mol Cancer Ther; 15(6); 1208-16. ©2016 AACR.

Highlights

  • Natural products have been a rich source for cancer drug discovery

  • Further tissue distribution studies suggest that this specific organ toxicity is at least in part due to the high exposure to apratoxin A that is observed in the pancreas of treated animals

  • In the tissue distribution study, liver displayed a Tissue penetration index (TPI) of 47.75, which is significantly higher than the TPI of subcutaneously implanted A549 tumor cells (TPI 1⁄4 20.41)

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Summary

Introduction

Natural products have been a rich source for cancer drug discovery. Three quarters of currently used anticancer drugs are either natural products or natural product–related molecules [1]. In addition to their therapeutic applications, natural products are widely used as tools to probe unknown biologic systems in cells, due to their often selective and potent interactions with a wide variety of biologic molecules [2]. Apratoxins, a class of cyclodepsipeptide isolated from marine cyanobacteria, have been shown to have potent anticancer activity against several cancer cell lines in vitro [3,4,5,6].

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