Journal of Biological Chemistry
Volume 286, Issue 8, 25 February 2011, Pages 6602-6613
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Signal Transduction
Lucanthone Is a Novel Inhibitor of Autophagy That Induces Cathepsin D-mediated Apoptosis*

https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M110.151324Get rights and content
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Cellular stress induced by nutrient deprivation, hypoxia, and exposure to many chemotherapeutic agents activates an evolutionarily conserved cell survival pathway termed autophagy. This pathway enables cancer cells to undergo self-digestion to generate ATP and other essential biosynthetic molecules to temporarily avoid cell death. Therefore, disruption of autophagy may sensitize cancer cells to cell death and augment chemotherapy-induced apoptosis. Chloroquine and its analog hydroxychloroquine are the only clinically relevant autophagy inhibitors. Because both of these agents induce ocular toxicity, novel inhibitors of autophagy with a better therapeutic index are needed. Here we demonstrate that the small molecule lucanthone inhibits autophagy, induces lysosomal membrane permeabilization, and possesses significantly more potent activity in breast cancer models compared with chloroquine. Exposure to lucanthone resulted in processing and recruitment of microtubule-associated protein 1 light chain 3 (LC3) to autophagosomes, but impaired autophagic degradation as revealed by transmission electron microscopy and the accumulation of p62/SQSTM1. Microarray analysis, qRT-PCR, and immunoblotting determined that lucanthone stimulated a large induction in cathepsin D, which correlated with cell death. Accordingly, knockdown of cathepsin D reduced lucanthone-mediated apoptosis. Subsequent studies using p53+/+ and p53−/− HCT116 cells established that lucanthone induced cathepsin D expression and reduced cancer cell viability independently of p53 status. In addition, lucanthone enhanced the anticancer activity of the histone deacetylase inhibitor vorinostat. Collectively, our results demonstrate that lucanthone is a novel autophagic inhibitor that induces apoptosis via cathepsin D accumulation and enhances vorinostat-mediated cell death in breast cancer models.

Apoptosis
Autophagy
Breast Cancer
Cancer Therapy
Caspase

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*

This work was supported by a grant from the Martha and Frank Herberth Memorial Fund and Beta and Melvin Leazar Memorial Fund and Robert F. and Anna M. Harper Memorial Fund of the San Antonio Area Foundation and funds provided by Spectrum Pharmaceuticals. G. R. is employed at Spectrum Pharmaceuticals. This study was funded in part by Spectrum Pharmaceuticals.

The on-line version of this article (available at http://www.jbc.org) contains supplemental Table S1.