학술논문

Identification of ACA-28, a 1′-acetoxychavicol acetate analogue compound, as a novel modulator of ERK MAPK signaling, which preferentially kills human melanoma cells.
Document Type
Article
Source
Genes to Cells. Jul2017, Vol. 22 Issue 7, p608-618. 11p.
Subject
*ACETOXYCHAVICOL acetate
*MELANOMA treatment
*EXTRACELLULAR signal-regulated kinases
*HER2 protein
*GENETIC mutation
Language
ISSN
1356-9597
Abstract
The extracellular signal-regulated kinase ( ERK) signaling pathway is essential for cell proliferation and is frequently deregulated in human tumors such as melanoma. Melanoma remains incurable despite the use of conventional chemotherapy; consequently, development of new therapeutic agents for melanoma is highly desirable. Here, we carried out a chemical genetic screen using a fission yeast phenotypic assay and showed that ACA-28, a synthetic derivative of 1′-acetoxychavicol acetate ( ACA), which is a natural ginger compound, effectively inhibited the growth of melanoma cancer cells wherein ERK MAPK signaling is hyperactivated due to mutations in the upstream activating regulators. ACA-28 more potently inhibited the growth of melanoma cells than did the parental compound ACA. Importantly, the growth of normal human epidermal melanocytes ( NHEM) was less affected by ACA-28 at the same 50% inhibitory concentration. In addition, ACA-28 specifically induced apoptosis in NIH/3T3 cells which were oncogenically transformed with human epidermal growth factor receptor-2 ( HER2/ErbB2), but not in the parental cells. Notably, the ACA-28-induced apoptosis in melanoma and HER2-transformed cells was abrogated when ERK activation was blocked with a specific MEK inhibitor U0126. Consistently, ACA-28 more strongly stimulated ERK phosphorylation in melanoma cells, as compared in NHEM. ACA-28 might serve as a promising seed compound for melanoma treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]