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Systematic profiling of Taxol resistance and sensitivity to tubulin missence mutations at molecular and cellular levels.

Authors :
Zhou, Lihua
Ding, Xi
Cao, Jingjing
Feng, Yu
Gu, Yuqin
Liu, Ling
Chen, Rong
Gao, Dongyun
Chen, Xiaoling
Source :
Chemical Biology & Drug Design. Apr2024, Vol. 103 Issue 4, p1-9. 9p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Taxol (paclitaxel) is the first approved microtubule‐stabilizing agent (MSA) by binding stoichiometrically to tubulin, which is considered to be one of the most significant advances in first‐line chemotherapy against diverse tumors. However, a large number of residue missence mutations harboring in the tubulin have been observed to cause acquired drug resistance, largely limiting the clinical application of Taxol and its analogs in chemotherapy. A systematic investigation of the intermolecular interactions between the Taxol and various tubulin mutants would help to establish a comprehensive picture of drug response to tubulin mutations in clinical treatment of cancer, and to design new MSA agents with high potency and selectivity to overcome drug resistance. In this study, we described an integration of in silico analysis and in vitro assay (iSiV) to profile Taxol against a panel of 149 clinically observed, cancer‐associated missence mutations in β‐tubulin at molecular and cellular levels, aiming to a systematic understanding of molecular mechanism and biological implication underlying drug resistance and sensitivity conferring from tubulin mutations. It is revealed that the Taxol‐resistant mutations can be classified into three types: (I) nonbonded interaction broken due to mutation, (II) steric hindrance caused by mutation, and (III) conformational change upon mutation. In addition, we identified three new Taxol‐resistant mutations (C239Y, T274I, and R320P) that can largely reduce the binding affinity of Taxol to tubulin at molecular level, in which the T274I and R320P were observed to considerably impair the antitumor activity of Taxol at cellular level. Moreover, a novel drug‐susceptible mutation (M363T) was also identified, which improves Taxol affinity by 2.6‐fold and decreases Taxol antitumor EC50 values from 29.4 to 18.7 μM. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17470277
Volume :
103
Issue :
4
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Chemical Biology & Drug Design
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
176868967
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/cbdd.14513