Abstract

HCT116 (p21 −/−) human colon carcinoma cells treated with mithramycin SK (MSK), a novel analog of the antitumor antibiotic mithramycin A (MTA), were transiently arrested in G2/M, with some cells entering a faulty mitotic cycle without cytokinesis that resulted in G1-like cell arrest, which consisted of post-mitotic aneuploid G1 cells. Some of these cells synthesized DNA and elicited an apoptotic response. The absence of p21 WAF1 made HCT116 cells more sensitive to MSK than to the related MTA. MSK also showed higher antiproliferative activity than MTA on HCT116 cells with different genetic backgrounds, including those lacking the p53 gene. Apoptosis in MSK-treated p21 −/− cells involved caspase 2 rather than caspase 3. Untreated HCT116 (p21 −/−) cells presented a little caspase 3 activity, which increased slightly after treatment with MSK. The apoptotic response in p21 −/− cells comprised caspase 2 acting as an executor caspase together with a loss of mitochondrial membrane potential that may be initiated by caspase 2. In contrast, caspase 3 was activated in wild-type HCT116 after treatment with MSK.

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