Small-molecule MDM2 antagonists reveal aberrant p53 signaling in cancer: implications for therapy

C Tovar, J Rosinski, Z Filipovic… - Proceedings of the …, 2006 - National Acad Sciences
C Tovar, J Rosinski, Z Filipovic, B Higgins, K Kolinsky, H Hilton, X Zhao, BT Vu, W Qing…
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2006National Acad Sciences
The p53 tumor suppressor retains its wild-type conformation and transcriptional activity in
half of all human tumors, and its activation may offer a therapeutic benefit. However, p53
function could be compromised by defective signaling in the p53 pathway. Using a small-
molecule MDM2 antagonist, nutlin-3, to probe downstream p53 signaling we find that the
cell-cycle arrest function of the p53 pathway is preserved in multiple tumor-derived cell lines
expressing wild-type p53, but many have a reduced ability to undergo p53-dependent …
The p53 tumor suppressor retains its wild-type conformation and transcriptional activity in half of all human tumors, and its activation may offer a therapeutic benefit. However, p53 function could be compromised by defective signaling in the p53 pathway. Using a small-molecule MDM2 antagonist, nutlin-3, to probe downstream p53 signaling we find that the cell-cycle arrest function of the p53 pathway is preserved in multiple tumor-derived cell lines expressing wild-type p53, but many have a reduced ability to undergo p53-dependent apoptosis. Gene array analysis revealed attenuated expression of multiple apoptosis-related genes. Cancer cells with mdm2 gene amplification were most sensitive to nutlin-3 in vitro and in vivo, suggesting that MDM2 overexpression may be the only abnormality in the p53 pathway of these cells. Nutlin-3 also showed good efficacy against tumors with normal MDM2 expression, suggesting that many of the patients with wild-type p53 tumors may benefit from antagonists of the p53–MDM2 interaction.
National Acad Sciences