Back to Search Start Over

Quantitative live imaging of cancer and normal cells treated with Kinesin-5 inhibitors indicates significant differences in phenotypic responses and cell fate

Authors :
Jade Shi
Claudia Wilm
Frank Zenke
Clement T. Loy
Timothy J. Mitchison
Yangzhong Tang
Christiane Amendt
James D. Orth
Source :
Molecular Cancer Therapeutics. 7:3480-3489
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2008.

Abstract

Kinesin-5 inhibitors (K5I) are promising antimitotic cancer drug candidates. They cause prolonged mitotic arrest and death of cancer cells, but their full range of phenotypic effects in different cell types has been unclear. Using time-lapse microscopy of cancer and normal cell lines, we find that a novel K5I causes several different cancer and noncancer cell types to undergo prolonged arrest in monopolar mitosis. Subsequent events, however, differed greatly between cell types. Normal diploid cells mostly slipped from mitosis and arrested in tetraploid G1, with little cell death. Several cancer cell lines died either during mitotic arrest or following slippage. Contrary to prevailing views, mitotic slippage was not required for death, and the duration of mitotic arrest correlated poorly with the probability of death in most cell lines. We also assayed drug reversibility and long-term responses after transient drug exposure in MCF7 breast cancer cells. Although many cells divided after drug washout during mitosis, this treatment resulted in lower survival compared with washout after spontaneous slippage likely due to chromosome segregation errors in the cells that divided. Our analysis shows that K5Is cause cancer-selective cell killing, provides important kinetic information for understanding clinical responses, and elucidates mechanisms of drug sensitivity versus resistance at the level of phenotype. [Mol Cancer Ther 2008;7(11):3480–9]

Details

ISSN :
15388514 and 15357163
Volume :
7
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Molecular Cancer Therapeutics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9b2f5aa65cb9bd7a975e77603e08a46c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1158/1535-7163.mct-08-0684