Down-regulation of MYCN protein by CX-5461 leads to neuroblastoma tumor growth suppression

Space: StayCurrentMD Author: Jordan S. Taylor, Jasmine Zeki, Kimberly Ornell, Jeannine Coburn, Hiroyuki Shimada, Naohiko Ikegaki, Bill Chiu Published:

Author / Expert

Jordan S. Taylor, Jasmine Zeki, Kimberly Ornell, Jeannine Coburn, Hiroyuki Shimada, Naohiko Ikegaki, Bill Chiu

Topic overview

Abstract

Purpose

MYCN oncogene amplification is an independent predictor of poor prognosis in neuroblastoma. CX-5461 is a small molecular inhibitor that prevents initiation of ribosomal RNA (rRNA) synthesis by RNA Pol I, down-regulating MYCN/MYC proteins. We hypothesize that neuroblastoma tumor growth can be suppressed by CX-5461.

Methods

MYCN-amplified (KELLY, IMR5) and nonamplified (SY5Y, SKNAS) neuroblastoma cells were treated with CX-5461. MYCN/MYC expression after 24–48 h was determined by Western blot. Orthotopic neuroblastoma tumors created in mice using KELLY cells were treated with CX-5461-loaded silk films implanted locally. Tumor growth was monitored using ultrasound. Histologic evaluation of tumors was performed.

Results

IC50 for KELLY, IMR5, SY5Y, and SKNAS cells to CX-5461 was 0.75 μM, 0.02 μM, 0.8 μM, and 1.7 μM, respectively. CX-5461 down-regulated MYCN and MYC proteins at 0.25–1.0 μM on Western blot analysis. CX-5461-loaded silk film released 23.7±3 μg of the drug in 24 h and 48.2±3.9 μg at 120 h. KELLY tumors treated with CX-5461-loaded film reached 800 mm3 after 7.8±1.4 days, while those treated with control film reached the same size on 5.1±0.6 days (p=0.03). CX-5461-treated tumors showed collapse of nucleolar hypertrophy and MYCN protein downregulation.

Conclusion

We demonstrated that local delivery of CX-5461 via sustained release platform can suppress orthotopic neuroblastoma tumor growth, especially those with MYCN/MYC overexpression.

Keywords

Hashtags

1 Views
0 Comments

Comments

Loading comments...