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1 Arizona Cancer Center, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona; 2 Department of Chemistry, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; 3 Burnham Institute, La Jolla, California; and 4 ProlX Pharmaceuticals, Tucson, Arizona
Requests for reprints: Garth Powis, Arizona Cancer Center, University of Arizona, 1515 North Campbell Avenue, Tucson, AZ 85724-5024. Phone: 520-626-6408; Fax: 520-626-4848. E-mail: gpowis{at}azcc.arizona.edu
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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PtdIns-3-kinase and the closely related p110ß and p110
. p110
and p110ß are found in all adult human tissues, whereas p110
is found in leukocytes. All class Ia kinases are associated with a p85 regulatory/adaptor subunit. Three genes that can also generate splice variants encode at least eight p85 adaptor subunits (3). Different p85 subunits show differences in tissue distribution that may be of functional significance, but there does not appear to be a preferential association between the p85 subunits and any of the p110s. Class Ib PtdIns-3-kinase is represented by p110
(which associates with a p101 adapter subunit) and is confined largely to leukocytes. Class II PtdIns-3-kinases are larger molecules of
200 kDa without adapter subunits and give rise to PtdIns(3)P and PtdIns(3,4)P2. Class III PtdIns-3-kinase has one member, Vps34p, which is constitutively active and is involved in lysosomal protein trafficking. The lipid product of Vps34p is PtdIns(3)P.
Likely, all mammalian cells express representatives of each class of PtdIns-3-kinase (3). Class Ia PtdIns-3-kinases are activated by transmembrane receptors and oncogenic tyrosine kinases through the binding to Src homology 2 domains found in all p85 isoforms (4) and by p21ras (5). Class Ib PtdIns-3-kinase is activated by ß
subunits of heterotrimeric G proteins released on the activation of seven-pass transmembrane receptors (6). Class II PtdIns-3-kinases are activated by tyrosine kinase coupled receptors, although their mechanism of activation and function are largely unknown.
The PtdIns-3-kinase superfamily includes protein kinases bearing the conserved PtdIns-3-kinase domain (7), such as DNA-dependent protein kinase, which is involved in the repair of DNA damage; ataxia telangiectasia mutated and ataxia telangiectasia related, which link the DNA repair machinery to control of the cell cycle; and mammalian target of rapamycin, which regulates protein synthesis by phosphorylating substrates controlling mRNA translation.
p110 PtdIns-3-kinase can cause cellular transformation (8). Constitutive activation of PtdIns-3-kinase occurs in human small cell lung cancer (9) and in
40% of human ovarian, head and neck, urinary tract, and cervical cancers (10). The major mechanism for the oncogenic activity of PtdIns-3-kinase is by preventing apoptosis through the downstream activation of Akt (protein kinase B; refs. 11, 12). Akt is a member of the AGC serine-threonine kinase family (13). There are three mammalian genes, Akt1, Akt2, and Akt3, giving proteins that share a high degree of sequence homology in their catalytic and NH2-terminal pleckstrin homology domains but diverge in other domains (14). All of the Akt isoforms undergo membrane recruitment from the cytoplasm through the binding of their pleckstrin homology domain to membrane PtdIns(3,4,5)P3 leading Akt activation by phosphorylation on Thr308 and Ser473 (in Akt1) by membrane-associated kinases (14, 15). The kinase responsible for Thr308 phosphorylation is PtdIns-dependent kinase-1, whereas the identity of the Ser473 kinase is unclear (16, 17). Fully phosphorylated Akt is independent of phospholipid activation and detaches from the plasma membrane moving to the cytoplasm and nucleus (18), where it phosphorylates a variety of target proteins to prevent the expression of death genes or to induce cell survival (19). Promoters of apoptosis that are inhibited by Akt are the forkhead transcription factor family members FKHR, FHHRL1, and AFX (19); the proapoptotic Bcl-2 family member Bad (20); the apoptosis signaling kinase-1, which transduces stress signals to the c-Jun NH2-terminal kinase and p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase pathways (21); and procaspase-9, which initiates the caspase cell death cascade (22). Targets that Akt activates to promote cell survival are nuclear factor-
B (23) and cyclic AMP response element binding protein (24). Akt2 is amplified and overexpressed in 12% of human ovarian cancers, 3% of breast cancers, and 10% of pancreatic cancers (25, 26), and Akt3 is overexpressed in breast and prostate cancer (27).
The dual-specificity tyrosine-threonine/PtdIns-3-phosphatase tumor suppressor protein phosphatase and tensin homologue detected in chromosome 10 (28, 29) prevents the accumulation of PtdIns(3,4,5)P3 and thus attenuates PtdIns-3-kinase signaling (30). Phosphatase and tensin homologue is lost in a large number of human cancers including advanced prostate, endometrial, renal, glial, melanoma, and small cell lung cancers (30). Therefore, the PtdIns-3-kinase pathway, through either increased growth factor receptor or oncogenic tyrosine kinase activity, increased PtdIns-3-kinase, increased Akt, and deleted phosphatase and tensin homologue, or a combination of these factors is activated in a large number of human cancers. Thus, inhibiting the PtdIns-3-kinase pathway offers a very attractive target for cancer drug discovery.
Wortmannin is an irreversible inhibitor at nanomolar concentrations of PtdIns-3-kinase (31), binding covalently to Lys802 of the catalytic site of p110
(32) and Lys883 of p110
(33). Most PtdIns-3-kinase isoforms are equally inhibited by wortmannin (3). We have reported previously that wortmannin has antitumor activity against tumor xenografts in animals (34); however, this activity is variable and accompanied by liver and hematologic toxicity. Wortmannin is also a biologically unstable molecule. We now report the in vivo molecular pharmacology and antitumor activity of novel, biologically stable, and less toxic viridian class inhibitors of PtdIns-3-kinase.
| Materials and Methods |
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Toxicity Studies
Viridins were administered i.p. daily for 4 days to male C57BL/6 mice, three per group, with at least four doses between 1 and 30 mg/kg. Wortmannin was administered at doses up to 3 mg/kg. The mice were killed 24 hours after the last dose, and changes in body weight from the start of the study, blood lymphocyte, neutrophil, RBC and platelet counts, and serum glucose, aspartate aminotransferase, alanine aminotransferase, blood urea nitrogen, and creatinine were measured. The maximum tolerated dose (MTD) for each compound was determined as the dose that caused
4 g body weight loss or death of at least 1 of the 3.8 animals. Liver toxicity was measured as the mean increase in serum alanine aminotransferase and aspartate aminotransferase and expressed relative to that caused by wortmannin at its MTD, at a dose of the viridin that gave the same decrease in blood lymphocyte count as wortmannin at its MTD.
Measurement of PtdIns-3-Kinase
The ability of the semisynthetic viridins to directly inhibit immunoprecipitated PtdIns-3-kinases was measured using a five-point concentration response curve between 0.05 and 10 nmol/L (31) and confirmed the results of the screening studies.5 Inhibition of cellular PtdIns-3-kinase was measured indirectly by the effect on Akt activation. Briefly, HT-29 cells were grown in 35 mm well plates to 75% confluency in DMEM supplemented with 10% heat-inactivated fetal bovine serum-4.5 g/L glucose in a 5% CO2 atmosphere. The medium was replaced by DMEM without fetal bovine serum for 16 hours, and the cells were incubated with wortmannin or the viridins for 2 hours at 37°C before the addition of epidermal growth factor (50 ng/mL). After 20 minutes, the culture medium was aspirated and the cells were lysed in 50 mmol/L HEPES buffer (pH 7.5), 50 mmol/L NaCl, 0.2 mmol/L NaF, 0.2 mmol/L sodium orthovanadate, 1 mmol/L phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, 20 µg/mL aprotinin, 20 µg/mL leupeptin, 1% NP40, and 0.25% sodium deoxycholate (lysis buffer). Total cell lysate protein (50 µg) was boiled for 5 minutes, loaded on a 10% acrylamide/bisacrylamide gel, and separated by electrophoresis at 150 V for 40 minutes. Proteins were electrophoretically transferred to a polyvinylidene fluoride membrane, preincubated with a blocking buffer of 137 mmol/L NaCl, 2.7 mmol/L KCl, 897 mmol/L CaCl2, 491 mmol/L MgCl2, 3.4 mmol/L Na2HPO4, 593 mmol/L KH2PO4, and 5% bovine serum albumin, and incubated overnight with anti-phospho-Ser473-Akt or anti-Akt polyclonal antibody. Detection used donkey anti-rabbit IgG peroxidase-coupled secondary antibody and the Renaissance chemiluminescence system on Kodak X-Omat Blue ML films (Eastman Kodak, New Haven, CT). Bands were quantified using Eagle Eye software (Stratagene Corp., La Jolla, CA).
Pharmacodynamic Studies
HT-29 colon cancer cells (107) were injected s.c. into the flanks of male severe combined immunodefcient (scid) mice and allowed to grow to
300 mm3. Mice were administered an i.p. dose of viridins at 5, 10, and 20 mg/kg in 0.9% NaCl, 0.1% Tween 20, or vehicle alone. Mice were killed at various times, and the tumors were removed and immediately frozen in liquid N2. For the assay, the tumors were homogenized in lysis buffer and Western blotting was performed using anti-phospho-Ser473-Akt and anti-Akt antibodies. Tumor Akt activity was expressed as the ratio of phospho-Ser473-Akt to total Akt.
Pharmacokinetic Studies
Male C57BL/6 mice were administered PX-866, PX-867, or PX-881 i.p. at doses of 5, 10, or 15 mg/kg or PX-866 i.p., i.v., or p.o. at a dose of 10 mg/kg,. The mice were killed at different times, blood was collected into heparinized tubes, and plasma was prepared. When bile was collected, the entire gall bladder of the mouse was removed. Plasma (0.2 mL) and gall bladders were immediately mixed with 0.2 mL of 0.25 mol/L sodium phosphate buffer (pH 10) and extracted for 1 hour by inversion with 4 mL ethyl acetate. After centrifugation, organic layer (3.8 mL) was removed and evaporated under N2 and the residue was dried on a lyophilizer. LC/mass spectrometry analysis was performed on a ThermoFinnigan TSQ Quantum triple quadrupole mass spectrometer in tandem with a Surveyor LC system (San Jose, CA). Chromatographic separation was achieved with a Waters Symmetry C-18 3.9 x 150 mm column (Waters, Milford, PA) with a mobile phase of 0.1% trifluoroactetic acid in 60% methanol at a flow rate of 0.4 mL/min. For the assay, the sample residue was dissolved in 100 µL mobile phase and centrifuged at 15,000 x g for 5 minutes at 4°C. The autosampler sample tray was maintained at 4°C, and the injection volume was 50 µL. Analytes were ionized by positive electrospray ionization with a spray voltage of 5,000 V, a sheath gas pressure of 30 psi, and a capillary temperature of 280°C. N2 was used as the sheath gas and argon as the collision gas at a pressure of 1.5 mTorr. Detection of analytes employed selective reaction monitoring that only allows ions of a selected mass to pass through the first quadropole into the collision cell. After fragmentation in the collision cell, the third quadropole allows only fragments of a selected mass to pass on to the detector. The following reactions were monitored using the selective reaction monitoring scan mode for compounds for which authentic standards were available [i.e., (with parent mass/fragment mass) PX-866 (526.2/336.1) at a collision energy of 36 eV, N-mono-deallyl PX-866 (486.0/294.1) at a collision energy of 24 eV, and N-di-deallyl PX-866 (446.0/254.023) at a collision energy of 28 eV]. The limit of detection of the assay for all the compounds from 0.2 mL mouse plasma was 0.1 ng/mL.
Antitumor Studies
HT-29 colon cancer, OvCar-3 ovarian cancer, or A-549 non-small cell lung cancer cells (107) in log cell growth suspended in 0.2 mL Matrigel (Becton Dickinson Biosciences, Palo Alto, CA) were injected s.c. into the flanks of scid mice. The animals were weighed weekly, and tumor diameters were measured twice weekly at right angles (dshort and dlong) with electronic calipers and converted to volume by the formula volume = (dshort)2 x (dlong) ÷ 2 (35). When the tumors reached volumes between 150 and 300 mm3, the mice were stratified into groups of eight animals having approximately equal mean tumor volumes, and administration of the viridins was started. When the tumor volume reached
2,000 mm3 or became necrotic, the animals were euthanized. Tumor growth rate was calculated from the linear portion of the least squares regression of the cube root of the tumor volume. Log10 cell kill was calculated by the formula log10 cell kill = [tumor growth delay (day)] x [tumor doubling time (day) x 3.32] (36). One-way ANOVA using the general linear model (37) was used to test for the effect of treatment on tumor growth rate and growth delay.
| Results |
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Inhibition of Cellular Akt
The ability of the semisynthetic viridins to inhibit the epidermal growth factordependent activation of Akt was measured in HT-29 colon cancer cells by Western hybridization using anti-phospho-Ser473-Akt antibody (Fig. 2A). Quantitation of the blots to give the ratio of phospho-Ser473-Akt to total Akt (Fig. 2B) gave IC50 values (±SE) for PX-866 of 16.8 ± 2.2 nmol/L, PX-867 of 26.7 ± 3.5 nmol/L, and PX-881 of 13.7 ± 0.6 nmol/L.
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10% of the total PX-866 administered.
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Antitumor Activity
The antitumor activity of the viridins was investigated using s.c. implanted human tumor xenografts in scid mice. The compounds were administered at
75% of their MTD at the schedule and route employed (Table 4). Treatment of mice with established 120 mm3 OvCar-3 ovarian cancer tumor xenografts with PX-866 i.p. daily for 9 days gave the best antitumor response with an optimal treated versus control (T/C) of 30% and a calculated log10 cell kill of 1.2. All semisynthetic viridins were more active than wortmannin (T/C 47%; log10 cell kill 0.5), and PX-866 was more active than PX-867 (T/C 41%; log10 cell kill 0.6) or PX-881 (T/C 52%; log10 cell kill 0.8). In the rapidly growing HT-29 colon cancer xenograft, PX-866 administered i.p. showed the same activity as wortmannin with T/C of 39% and a calculated log10 cell kill of 0.4 and was more active than the other analogues. In A-549 non-small cell lung cancer xenografts, PX-866 administered i.v. at 9 mg/kg/d for 9 days gave a T/C of 26%, and when given i.v. at 12 mg/kg/d every other day for 5 days, the T/C was 45% and the log10 cell kill was 0.7. PX-866 administered p.o. at 4 mg/kg/d every other day for 5 days, which was 75% of the MTD by this route and schedule, gave a T/C of 47% and a log10 cell kill of 0.9.
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| Discussion |
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We chose to develop broad-spectrum inhibitors of PtdIns-3-kinase by building on our earlier studies showing that wortmannin has antitumor activity against a variety of tumor xenografts in animal models (34). The limitations to the use of wortmannin as an antitumor agent are its acute toxicity, including hepatotoxicity, and its biological instability. For example, wortmannin cannot be detected in blood after administration to mice (RAID Report: Wortmannin NSC-221019. National Cancer Institute, 2003).6 From a series of 10 semisynthetic viridins chosen for their ability to inhibit PtdIns-3-kinase and for their growth inhibition of cancer cells in short-term culture, three were chosen for in vivo investigation. The compounds PX-866, PX-867, and PX-881 were stable in solution at physiologic pH, and they achieved measurable concentrations in plasma following i.v. administration with plasma half-lives up to 20 minutes. All three semisynthetic viridins inhibited cell and tumor xenograft phospho-Ser473-Akt used as an integrated measure of the activity of the PtdIns-3-kinase signaling pathway.
PX-866 was chosen for further evaluation being the best inhibitor of tumor phospho-Ser473-Akt, being water soluble for i.v. administration, and giving the largest plasma AUC for parent compound in mice. PX-866 showed marked differences in the time course of its inhibition of tumor phospho-Ser473-Akt depending on its route of administration, with inhibition lasting <24 hours following i.p. administration, 36 hours following i.v. administration, and >48 hours following p.o. administration. There was no correlation between tumor phospho-Ser473-Akt inhibition and plasma AUC for parent drug following administration by the different routes. PX-866 was metabolized to give the N-deallylated and N-di-deallylated metabolites, both of which retained the ability to inhibit PtdIns-3-kinase at low nanomolar per liter concentrations, as well as other unidentified metabolites. There is clearly a discrepancy between the levels of PX-866 and the metabolites that we have been able to identify in the plasma and the antitumor activity of PX-866 particularly comparing i.p. and p.o. administration. PX-866 metabolites were secreted in the bile so that enterohepatic cycling might contribute to the long-term inhibition of tumor PtdIns-3-kinase signaling particularly following p.o. administration. Another possibility is that there are as yet unidentified metabolites of PX-866 that are responsible for the inhibition of PtdIns-3-kinase signaling. This will require further study. Finally, PX-866 and its metabolites are irreversible inhibitors of PtdIns-3-kinase so that the time course of inhibition of PtdIns-3-kinase may bear little direct correlation to plasma concentrations.
In vivo antitumor activity was seen with PX-866, PX-867, and PX-881, but PX-866 was the most active compound with i.v. and p.o. administration showing greater antitumor activity than i.p. administration. Inhibition of the PtdIns-3-kinase/Akt cell survival pathway with wortmannin has been reported to enhance the activity of other anticancer drugs, including gemcitabine against pancreatic cell lines in vitro (44), Gleevec against Philadelphia chromosome positive chronic myelogenous leukemia in vitro (45), and gemcitabine against orthotopic pancreatic tumor xenografts in vivo (46). In our study, PX-866 increased the antitumor activity of cisplatin against A-549 non-small cell lung cancer xenografts. We also found that PX-866 potentiated in vivo growth inhibition by radiation in OvCar-3 human tumor xenografts. The potentiation by wortmannin of radiation cell killing has been ascribed in cell lines to inhibition of tumor cell DNA-dependent kinase (47) and in tumors to inhibition of PtdIns-3-kinase in vascular endothelium (45).
PX-866 and wortmannin inhibit PtdIns-3-kinases at 0.1 and 1.2 nmol/L, respectively. At concentrations >50 nmol/L, wortmannin inhibits other PtdIns-3-kinase family members such as DNA-dependent protein kinase, ataxia telangiectasia mutated, ataxia telangiectasia related, mammalian target of rapamycin, and PtdIns-4-kinase. We have found that PX-866 does not inhibit mammalian target of rapamycin kinase activity at concentrations up to 10 µmol/L.7 Unrelated proteins such as phospholipase C, phospholipase D, and myosin light chain kinase are also inhibited by wortmannin (3, 38, 48). Compared with purified enzyme, cells require at least 10-fold higher concentrations of PX-866 and wortmannin to inhibit PtdIns-3-kinase signaling, and higher concentrations are also required to inhibit the other enzymes. We cannot address directly whether the PtdIns-3-kinases or other targets are responsible for the in vivo antitumor activity of PX-866. However, the low plasma concentrations of PX-866 and its metabolites, which after p.o. administration do not rise >40 nmol/L, make it likely that the primary target is indeed PtdIns-3-kinase.
In summary, we have shown that biologically stable semisynthetic viridins inhibit cell and tumor xenograft PtdIns-3-kinase signaling and have in vivo antitumor activity with PX-866 being the most active compound. Prolonged inhibition of tumor PtdIns-3-kinase signaling is seen following p.o. and i.v. administration of PX-866. There is first-pass metabolism of PX-866, and synthetic standards of several metabolites were shown to also inhibit PtdIns-3-kinase. PX-866 has single agent in vivo antitumor activity and enhances the antitumor activity of other chemotherapeutic drugs and radiation.
| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked advertisement in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
5 Wipf P, Minion DJ, Halter RJ, et al. Synthesis and biological evaluation of synthetic viridins derived from C(20)-hetroalkylation of the steroidal Pl-3-kinase inhibitor wortmannin. Org Biomol Chem. In press 2004. ![]()
6 G. Powis, unpublished results. ![]()
7 R. Abraham, unpublished observations. ![]()
Received 3/ 3/04; revised 4/13/04; accepted 5/ 5/04.
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