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Destabilizers of the thymidylate synthase homodimer accelerate its proteasomal degradation and inhibit cancer growth

Authors :
Luca Costantino
Stefania Ferrari
Matteo Santucci
Outi MH Salo-Ahen
Emanuele Carosati
Silvia Franchini
Angela Lauriola
Cecilia Pozzi
Matteo Trande
Gaia Gozzi
Puneet Saxena
Giuseppe Cannazza
Lorena Losi
Daniela Cardinale
Alberto Venturelli
Antonio Quotadamo
Pasquale Linciano
Lorenzo Tagliazucchi
Maria Gaetana Moschella
Remo Guerrini
Salvatore Pacifico
Rosaria Luciani
Filippo Genovese
Stefan Henrich
Silvia Alboni
Nuno Santarem
Anabela da Silva Cordeiro
Elisa Giovannetti
Godefridus J Peters
Paolo Pinton
Alessandro Rimessi
Gabriele Cruciani
Robert M Stroud
Rebecca C Wade
Stefano Mangani
Gaetano Marverti
Domenico D'Arca
Glauco Ponterini
Maria Paola Costi
Source :
eLife, Vol 11 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
eLife Sciences Publications Ltd, 2022.

Abstract

Drugs that target human thymidylate synthase (hTS), a dimeric enzyme, are widely used in anticancer therapy. However, treatment with classical substrate-site-directed TS inhibitors induces over-expression of this protein and development of drug resistance. We thus pursued an alternative strategy that led us to the discovery of TS-dimer destabilizers. These compounds bind at the monomer-monomer interface and shift the dimerization equilibrium of both the recombinant and the intracellular protein toward the inactive monomers. A structural, spectroscopic, and kinetic investigation has provided evidence and quantitative information on the effects of the interaction of these small molecules with hTS. Focusing on the best among them, E7, we have shown that it inhibits hTS in cancer cells and accelerates its proteasomal degradation, thus causing a decrease in the enzyme intracellular level. E7 also showed a superior anticancer profile to fluorouracil in a mouse model of human pancreatic and ovarian cancer. Thus, over sixty years after the discovery of the first TS prodrug inhibitor, fluorouracil, E7 breaks the link between TS inhibition and enhanced expression in response, providing a strategy to fight drug-resistant cancers.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2050084X
Volume :
11
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
eLife
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.6b5ed787a8314e518ea035b5e470ee7c
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.73862