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A common pharmacophore for epothilone and taxanes: Molecular basis for drug resistance conferred by tubulin mutations in human cancer cells

  1. Author:
    Giannakakou, P.
    Gussio, R.
    Nogales, E.
    Downing, K. H.
    Zaharevitz, D.
    Bollbuck, B.
    Poy, G.
    Sackett, D.
    Nicolaou, K. C.
    Fojo, T.
  2. Author Address

    Giannakakou P NCI, Med Branch, NIH Bldg 10,Room 12N226,9000 Rockville Pike Bethesda, MD 20892 USA NCI, Med Branch, NIH Bethesda, MD 20892 USA NIDDKD, Genet & Biochem Branch, NIH Bethesda, MD 20892 USA NCI, Target Struct Based Drug Discovery, Informat Technol Branch, NIH Frederick, MD 21702 USA NCI, Lab Drug Discovery Res & Dev, Dev Therapeut Program, NIH Frederick, MD 21702 USA Univ Calif Berkeley, Lawrence Berkeley Lab, Div Life Sci Berkeley, CA 94720 USA Scripps Clin & Res Inst, Skaggs Inst Chem Biol La Jolla, CA 92037 USA Scripps Clin & Res Inst, Dept Chem La Jolla, CA 92037 USA
    1. Year: 2000
  1. Journal: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
    1. 97
    2. 6
    3. Pages: 2904-2909
  2. Type of Article: Article
  1. Abstract:

    The epothilones are naturally occurring antimitotic drugs that share with the taxanes a similar mechanism of action without apparent structural similarity. Although photoaffinity labeling and electron crystallographic studies have identified the taxane-binding site on beta-tubulin, similar data are not available for epothilones. To identify tubulin residues important for epothilone binding, we have isolated two epothilone-resistant human ovarian carcinoma sublines derived in a single-step selection with epothilone A or B, These epothilone-resistant sublines exhibit impaired epothilone- and taxane-driven tubulin polymerization caused by acquired beta-tubulin mutations (beta 274(Thr-->lle) and beta 282(Arg-->Gln)) located in the atomic model of alpha beta-tubulin near the taxane-binding site. Using molecular modeling, we investigated the conformational behavior of epothilone, which led to the identification of a common pharmacophore shared by taxanes and epothilones. Although two binding modes for the epothilones were predicted, one mode was identified as the preferred epothilone conformation as indicated by the activity of a potent pyridine-epothilone analogue. In addition, the structure-activity relationships of multiple taxanes and epothilones in the tubulin mutant cells can be fully explained by the model presented here, verifying its predictive value. Finally, these pharmacophore and activity data from mutant cells were used to model the tubulin binding of sarcodictyins, a distinct class of microtubule stabilizers, which in contrast to taxanes and the epothilones interact preferentially with the mutant tubulins, The unification of taxane, epothilone, and sarcodictyin chemistries in a single pharmacophore provides a framework to study drug-tubulin interactions that should assist in the rational design of agents targeting tubulin. [References: 27]

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