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Vol. 296, Issue 2, 364-371, February 2001
Departments of Pharmacology (J.S.L., K.T., A.V.), Chemistry
(J-K.J., S.R., P.W.), Environmental and Occupational Health (R.B.,
B.W.D.), and Pharmaceutical Sciences (B.W.D.), The Fiske Drug Discovery
Laboratory (J.S.L., K.T., A.V.), and the Combinatorial Chemistry Center
(J.-K..J., S.R., P.W.), University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania
The pentacyclic palmarumycins are structurally unique natural
products with both antifungal and antibacterial activities but their
antineoplastic effects are not well established. We have examined their
antiproliferative actions against tumor cells using a
temperature-sensitive tsFT210 mouse mammary carcinoma cell line and
found that a novel palmarumycin analog,
[8-(furan-3-ylmethoxy)-1-oxo-1,4-dihydronaphthalene-4-spiro-2'-naphtho[1",8"-de][1',3'][dioxin] or SR-7, prominently blocked mammalian cell cycle transition in G2/M but not in G1 phase. We found no
evidence for inhibition of the critical mitosis-controlling
cyclin-dependent kinase Cdk1, or its regulator, the dual specificity
phosphatase Cdc25. Moreover, Cdk1 was hypophosphorylated and not
directly inhibited by SR-7. SR-7 also failed in vitro to hypernucleate
bovine tubulin, did not compete with colchicine for tubulin binding,
and only modestly blocked GTP-induced assembly. In addition, SR-7
caused almost equal inhibition of paclitaxel-sensitive and -resistant
cell growth. Moreover, unlike benchmark tubulin-disrupting agents, SR-7
did not cause hyperphosphorylation of the antiapoptotic protein Bcl-2. Thus, SR-7 represents a novel chemical structure that can inhibit G2/M transition by a mechanism that appears to be
independent of marked tubulin disruption.
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