1. Academic Validation
  2. An NQO1 substrate with potent antitumor activity that selectively kills by PARP1-induced programmed necrosis

An NQO1 substrate with potent antitumor activity that selectively kills by PARP1-induced programmed necrosis

  • Cancer Res. 2012 Jun 15;72(12):3038-47. doi: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-11-3135.
Xiumei Huang 1 Ying Dong Erik A Bey Jessica A Kilgore Joseph S Bair Long-Shan Li Malina Patel Elizabeth I Parkinson Yiguang Wang Noelle S Williams Jinming Gao Paul J Hergenrother David A Boothman
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Pharmacology, UT Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, Texas 75390, USA.
Abstract

Agents, such as β-lapachone, that target the redox Enzyme, NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase 1 (NQO1), to induce programmed necrosis in solid tumors have shown great promise, but more potent tumor-selective compounds are needed. Here, we report that deoxynyboquinone kills a wide spectrum of Cancer cells in an NQO1-dependent manner with greater potency than β-lapachone. Deoxynyboquinone lethality relies on NQO1-dependent futile redox cycling that consumes oxygen and generates extensive Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS). Elevated ROS levels cause extensive DNA lesions, PARP1 hyperactivation, and severe NAD+ /ATP depletion that stimulate Ca2+ -dependent programmed necrosis, unique to this new class of NQO1 "bioactivated" drugs. Short-term exposure of NQO1+ cells to deoxynyboquinone was sufficient to trigger cell death, although genetically matched NQO1- cells were unaffected. Moreover, siRNA-mediated NQO1 or PARP1 knockdown spared NQO1+ cells from short-term lethality. Pretreatment of cells with BAPTA-AM (a cytosolic Ca2+ chelator) or catalase (enzymatic H2O2 scavenger) was sufficient to rescue deoxynyboquinone-induced lethality, as noted with β-lapachone. Investigations in vivo showed equivalent antitumor efficacy of deoxynyboquinone to β-lapachone, but at a 6-fold greater potency. PARP1 hyperactivation and dramatic ATP loss were noted in the tumor, but not in the associated normal lung tissue. Our findings offer preclinical proof-of-concept for deoxynyboquinone as a potent chemotherapeutic agent for treatment of a wide spectrum of therapeutically challenging solid tumors, such as pancreatic and lung cancers.

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