TY - JOUR
T1 - Quantitative Proteomic Profiling Reveals Key Pathways in the Anticancer Action of Methoxychalcone Derivatives in Triple Negative Breast Cancer
AU - Going, Catherine C.
AU - Tailor, Dhanir
AU - Kumar, Vineet
AU - Birk, Alisha M.
AU - Pandrala, Mallesh
AU - Rice, Meghan A.
AU - Stoyanova, Tanya
AU - Malhotra, Sanjay
AU - Pitteri, Sharon J.
N1 - Funding Information:
DT would like to thank the Indo-US Science and Technology Forum (IUSSTF) for a SERB Indo-US postdoctoral fellowship. TS is supported by NIH/NCI R00CA184397.
Publisher Copyright:
© Copyright 2018 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2018/10/5
Y1 - 2018/10/5
N2 - Triple negative breast cancer is an aggressive, heterogeneous disease with high recurrence and metastasis rates even with modern chemotherapy regimens and thus is in need of new therapeutics. Here, three novel synthetic analogues of chalcones, plant-based molecules that have demonstrated potency against a wide variety of cancers, were investigated as potential therapeutics for triple negative breast cancer. These compounds exhibit IC50 values of ∼5 μM in triple negative breast cancer cell lines and are more potent against triple negative breast cancer cell lines than against nontumor breast cell lines according to viability experiments. Tandem mass tag-based quantitative proteomics followed by gene set enrichment analysis and validation experiments using flow cytometry, apoptosis, and Western blot assays revealed three different anticancer mechanisms for these compounds. First, the chalcone analogues induce the unfolded protein response followed by apoptosis. Second, increases in the abundances of MHC-I pathway proteins occurs, which would likely result in immune stimulation in an organism. And third, treatment with the chalcone analogues causes disruption of the cell cycle by interfering with microtubule structure and by inducing G1 phase arrest. These data demonstrate the potential of these novel chalcone derivatives as treatments for triple negative breast cancer, though further work evaluating their efficacy in vivo is needed.
AB - Triple negative breast cancer is an aggressive, heterogeneous disease with high recurrence and metastasis rates even with modern chemotherapy regimens and thus is in need of new therapeutics. Here, three novel synthetic analogues of chalcones, plant-based molecules that have demonstrated potency against a wide variety of cancers, were investigated as potential therapeutics for triple negative breast cancer. These compounds exhibit IC50 values of ∼5 μM in triple negative breast cancer cell lines and are more potent against triple negative breast cancer cell lines than against nontumor breast cell lines according to viability experiments. Tandem mass tag-based quantitative proteomics followed by gene set enrichment analysis and validation experiments using flow cytometry, apoptosis, and Western blot assays revealed three different anticancer mechanisms for these compounds. First, the chalcone analogues induce the unfolded protein response followed by apoptosis. Second, increases in the abundances of MHC-I pathway proteins occurs, which would likely result in immune stimulation in an organism. And third, treatment with the chalcone analogues causes disruption of the cell cycle by interfering with microtubule structure and by inducing G1 phase arrest. These data demonstrate the potential of these novel chalcone derivatives as treatments for triple negative breast cancer, though further work evaluating their efficacy in vivo is needed.
KW - chalcone
KW - mechanism of action
KW - tandem mass tag (TMT)
KW - triple negative breast cancer
KW - unfolded protein response
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U2 - 10.1021/acs.jproteome.8b00636
DO - 10.1021/acs.jproteome.8b00636
M3 - Article
C2 - 30200768
AN - SCOPUS:85053939784
SN - 1535-3893
VL - 17
SP - 3574
EP - 3585
JO - Journal of Proteome Research
JF - Journal of Proteome Research
IS - 10
ER -