Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-05805-1
Title: Mitochondrial uncoupling reveals a novel therapeutic opportunity for p53-defective cancers
Authors: Kumar, R 
Coronel, L
Somalanka, B
Raju, A
Aning, OA
An, O 
Ho, YS
Chen, S
Mak, SY
Hor, PY
Yang, H 
Lakshmanan, M 
Itoh, H
Tan, SY 
Lim, YK 
Wong, APC 
Chew, SH
Huynh, TH 
Goh, BC 
Lim, CY 
Tergaonkar, V 
Cheok, CF 
Keywords: Science & Technology
Multidisciplinary Sciences
Science & Technology - Other Topics
CYTOCHROME-C
STEM-CELLS
NICLOSAMIDE
P53
PROTEIN
TARGET
DEATH
ACTIVATION
MECHANISMS
INHIBITION
Issue Date: 26-Sep-2018
Publisher: NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
Citation: Kumar, R, Coronel, L, Somalanka, B, Raju, A, Aning, OA, An, O, Ho, YS, Chen, S, Mak, SY, Hor, PY, Yang, H, Lakshmanan, M, Itoh, H, Tan, SY, Lim, YK, Wong, APC, Chew, SH, Huynh, TH, Goh, BC, Lim, CY, Tergaonkar, V, Cheok, CF (2018-09-26). Mitochondrial uncoupling reveals a novel therapeutic opportunity for p53-defective cancers. NATURE COMMUNICATIONS 9 (1). ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-05805-1
Abstract: © 2018, The Author(s). There are considerable challenges in directly targeting the mutant p53 protein, given the large heterogeneity of p53 mutations in the clinic. An alternative approach is to exploit the altered fitness of cells imposed by loss-of-wild-type p53. Here we identify niclosamide through a HTS screen for compounds selectively killing p53-deficient cells. Niclosamide impairs the growth of p53-deficient cells and of p53 mutant patient-derived ovarian xenografts. Metabolome profiling reveals that niclosamide induces mitochondrial uncoupling, which renders mutant p53 cells susceptible to mitochondrial-dependent apoptosis through preferential accumulation of arachidonic acid (AA), and represents a first-in-class inhibitor of p53 mutant tumors. Wild-type p53 evades the cytotoxicity by promoting the transcriptional induction of two key lipid oxygenation genes, ALOX5 and ALOX12B, which catalyzes the dioxygenation and breakdown of AA. Therefore, we propose a new paradigm for targeting cancers defective in the p53 pathway, by exploiting their vulnerability to niclosamide-induced mitochondrial uncoupling.
Source Title: NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/155186
ISSN: 2041-1723
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-018-05805-1
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