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Combination Drug Scheduling Defines a 'Window of Opportunity' for Chemopotentiation of Gemcitabine by an Orally Bioavailable, Selective ChK1 Inhibitor, GNE-900

Authors :
Jonathan Choi
Stephen Schmidt
Elizabeth Blackwood
Shiva Malek
Yang Xiao
Peter K. Jackson
Lewis J. Gazzard
Sharon Yee
Judi Ramiscal
Gary Cain
Michael Flagella
Diana Jakubiak
Jennifer Epler
Kenton Wong
Jason Halladay
Karen Williams
Thomas O'Brien
Marie Evangelista
Ivana Yen
Kaska Kowanetz
Source :
Molecular Cancer Therapeutics. 12:1968-1980
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2013.

Abstract

Checkpoint kinase 1 (ChK1) is a serine/threonine kinase that functions as a central mediator of the intra-S and G2–M cell-cycle checkpoints. Following DNA damage or replication stress, ChK1-mediated phosphorylation of downstream effectors delays cell-cycle progression so that the damaged genome can be repaired. As a therapeutic strategy, inhibition of ChK1 should potentiate the antitumor effect of chemotherapeutic agents by inactivating the postreplication checkpoint, causing premature entry into mitosis with damaged DNA resulting in mitotic catastrophe. Here, we describe the characterization of GNE-900, an ATP-competitive, selective, and orally bioavailable ChK1 inhibitor. In combination with chemotherapeutic agents, GNE-900 sustains ATR/ATM signaling, enhances DNA damage, and induces apoptotic cell death. The kinetics of checkpoint abrogation seems to be more rapid in p53-mutant cells, resulting in premature mitotic entry and/or accelerated cell death. Importantly, we show that GNE-900 has little single-agent activity in the absence of chemotherapy and does not grossly potentiate the cytotoxicity of gemcitabine in normal bone marrow cells. In vivo scheduling studies show that optimal administration of the ChK1 inhibitor requires a defined lag between gemcitabine and GNE-900 administration. On the refined combination treatment schedule, gemcitabine's antitumor activity against chemotolerant xenografts is significantly enhanced and dose-dependent exacerbation of DNA damage correlates with extent of tumor growth inhibition. In summary, we show that in vivo potentiation of gemcitabine activity is mechanism based, with optimal efficacy observed when S-phase arrest and release is followed by checkpoint abrogation with a ChK1 inhibitor. Mol Cancer Ther; 12(10); 1968–80. ©2013 AACR.

Details

ISSN :
15388514 and 15357163
Volume :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Molecular Cancer Therapeutics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....37852935e4d3039271ab2274751812ad
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1158/1535-7163.mct-12-1218