Citation

  • Authors: Vilgelm, A. E., Cobb, P., Malikayil, K., Flaherty, D., Andrew Johnson, C., Raman, D., Saleh, N., Higgins, B., Vara, B. A., Johnston, J. N., Johnson, D. B., Kelley, M. C., Chen, S. C., Ayers, G. D., Richmond, A.
  • Year: 2017
  • Journal: EBioMedicine 24 43-55
  • Applications: in vivo / siRNA / in vivo-jetPEI

Method

siRNA was mixed with in vivo-jetPEI and directly injected into the tumor twice a week.

Abstract

Antagonists of MDM2-p53 interaction are emerging anti-cancer drugs utilized in clinical trials for malignancies that rarely mutate p53, including melanoma. We discovered that MDM2-p53 antagonists protect DNA from drug-induced damage in melanoma cells and patient-derived xenografts. Among the tested DNA damaging drugs were various inhibitors of Aurora and Polo-like mitotic kinases, as well as traditional chemotherapy. Mitotic kinase inhibition causes mitotic slippage, DNA re-replication, and polyploidy. Here we show that re-replication of the polyploid genome generates replicative stress which leads to DNA damage. MDM2-p53 antagonists relieve replicative stress via the p53-dependent activation of p21 which inhibits DNA replication. Loss of p21 promoted drug-induced DNA damage in melanoma cells and enhanced anti-tumor activity of therapy combining MDM2 antagonist with mitotic kinase inhibitor in mice. In summary, MDM2 antagonists may reduce DNA damaging effects of anti-cancer drugs if they are administered together, while targeting p21 can improve the efficacy of such combinations.

Go to