Flavopiridol targets c-KIT transcription and induces apoptosis in gastrointestinal stromal tumor cells Journal Article


Authors: Sambol, E. B.; Ambrosini, G.; Geha, R. C.; Kennealey, P. T.; Decarolis, P.; O'Connor, R.; Wu, Y. V.; Motwani, M.; Chen, J. H.; Schwartz, G. K.; Singer, S.
Article Title: Flavopiridol targets c-KIT transcription and induces apoptosis in gastrointestinal stromal tumor cells
Abstract: Gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GIST) are characterized by activating mutations in the c-KIT gene which confers ligand-independent activation of the KIT receptor. Imatinib mesylate has been shown to effectively block constitutively active KIT and delay tumor growth. However, resistance to imatinib mesylate is emerging as a major clinical problem and novel therapies are needed. We report that treatment of GIST cells with the transcriptional inhibitor flavopiridol, initially down-regulates the antiapoptotic proteins bcl 2, mcl-1, and X-linked inhibitor of apoptosis protein which occurs as early as 4 hours after exposure. This is followed at 24 hours by the transcriptional suppression of KIT resulting in poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase cleavage and apoptosis. To separate the apoptotic effect of KIT suppression relative to the down-regulation of antiapoptotic proteins, we used small interfering RNA-directed knockdown of KIT. Results show that focused suppression of KIT alone is sufficient to induce apoptosis in GIST cells, but not to the same extent as flavopiridol. In contrast, imatinib mesylate, which inhibits KIT kinase activity but does not suppress total KIT expression, fails to cause apoptosis. We also show that flavopiridol suppresses KIT mRNA expression through positive transcriptional elongation factor inhibition and decreases KIT promoter activity. This causes a global decrease in the level of functionally mature KIT at the cell surface, resulting in a decrease in autophosphorylation at tyrosine residues 703 and 721, which characterizes activated KIT. Our results indicate that targeting KIT expression and these antiapoptotic proteins with flavopiridol represents a novel means to disrupt GIST cell dependence on KIT signaling and collectively renders these cells sensitive to apoptosis. ©2006 American Association for Cancer Research.
Keywords: controlled study; protein expression; human cell; promoter region; dose response; antineoplastic agents; gene targeting; gastrointestinal stromal tumor; imatinib; stem cell factor; gastrointestinal stromal tumors; proto-oncogene proteins c-kit; protein bcl 2; apoptosis; enzyme inhibition; protein degradation; small interfering rna; down-regulation; genetic transcription; transcription, genetic; drug effect; enzyme activity; cell line, tumor; pyrimidines; tyrosine; autophosphorylation; phosphorylation; messenger rna; protein mcl 1; western blotting; tumor cell; down regulation; flavonoids; flavopiridol; piperidines; piperazines; nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide adenosine diphosphate ribosyltransferase; rna polymerase ii; downstream processing; rna polymerase; transcription termination; transcription elongation factor; promoter regions (genetics); x linked inhibitor of apoptosis
Journal Title: Cancer Research
Volume: 66
Issue: 11
ISSN: 0008-5472
Publisher: American Association for Cancer Research  
Date Published: 2006-06-01
Start Page: 5858
End Page: 5866
Language: English
DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.can-05-2933
PUBMED: 16740725
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - "Cited By (since 1996): 53" - "Export Date: 4 June 2012" - "CODEN: CNREA" - "Source: Scopus"
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MSK Authors
  1. Elliot Brett Sambol
    14 Sambol
  2. Rula Christine Geha
    11 Geha
  3. Yuhsin Victoria Wu
    6 Wu
  4. Gary Schwartz
    385 Schwartz
  5. Monica V Motwani
    36 Motwani
  6. Jinhong Chen
    17 Chen
  7. Samuel Singer
    337 Singer