1. Academic Validation
  2. HMN-176, an active metabolite of the synthetic antitumor agent HMN-214, restores chemosensitivity to multidrug-resistant cells by targeting the transcription factor NF-Y

HMN-176, an active metabolite of the synthetic antitumor agent HMN-214, restores chemosensitivity to multidrug-resistant cells by targeting the transcription factor NF-Y

  • Cancer Res. 2003 Oct 15;63(20):6942-7.
Hideki Tanaka 1 Nobuko Ohshima Mami Ikenoya Kinuyo Komori Fumitaka Katoh Hiroyoshi Hidaka
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Discovery Research Laboratories, Nippon Shinyaku Co. Ltd., Kyoto 601-8550, Japan. hi.tanaka@po.nippon-shinyaku.co.jp
PMID: 14583495
Abstract

HMN-176 ((E)-4-[[2-N-[4-methoxybenzenesulfonyl]amino]stilbazole]1-oxide) is an active metabolite of HMN-214 ((E)-4-[2-[2-(N-acetyl-N-[4-methoxybenzenesulfonyl]amino)stilbazole]]1-oxide), which has a potent antitumor activity in mouse xenograft models. In this study, we show that HMN-176 circumvents multidrug resistance in a K2 human ovarian Cancer subline selected for Adriamycin resistance (K2/ARS). Upon treatment of K2/ARS cells with 3 microM HMN-176, the GI(50) of Adriamycin for the cells decreased by approximately 50%. To explore the molecular mechanism of this effect, we assessed the expression of the multidrug resistance gene (MDR1), which is constitutive in K2/ARS cells, at both the protein and the mRNA level. Western and reverse transcription-PCR analysis revealed that the expression of MDR1 was significantly suppressed by treatment with HMN-176. Furthermore, when administered p.o., HMN-214 suppressed the expression of MDR1 mRNA in a mouse xenograft model implanted with KB-A.1, an Adriamycin-resistant cell line. Luciferase reporter fusion gene analysis demonstrated that HMN-176 inhibited the Y-box-dependent promoter activity of the MDR1 gene in a dose-dependent manner. Moreover, we show by electrophoretic mobility shift assay that HMN-176 inhibits the binding of NF-Y, which is thought to be an essential factor for the basal expression of MDR1, to its target Y-box consensus sequence in the MDR-1 promoter. Inhibition of MDR-1 expression was achieved with pharmacological concentrations of HMN-176, suggesting that HMN-176 may act by two different mechanisms-cytotoxicity and MDR1 down-regulation-simultaneously. The data presented strongly suggest that the antitumor mechanism of HMN-176 (or its prodrug HMN-214 in vivo) is quite different from those of known antitumor agents.

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