4.5 Article

Belinostat and vincristine demonstrate mutually synergistic cytotoxicity associated with mitotic arrest and inhibition of polyploidy in a preclinical model of aggressive diffuse large B cell lymphoma

Journal

CANCER BIOLOGY & THERAPY
Volume 17, Issue 12, Pages 1240-1252

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/15384047.2016.1250046

Keywords

Cell cycle; drug resistance; histone deacetylase inhibitor; lymphoma; mitosis; microtubule; polyploidy

Categories

Funding

  1. Arizona Biomedical Research Commission
  2. career development award
  3. developmental project award
  4. cancer biology training grant [T32CA009213]
  5. Cancer Center Support Grant [P30CA023074]
  6. Undergraduate Research Biology Program at the University of Arizona
  7. Hyundai Hope on Wheels Young Investigator Award
  8. SWOG Development Award from the Hope Foundation
  9. [1 P50 CA-130805-05]

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Diffuse Large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) is an aggressive malignancy that has a 60 percent 5-year survival rate, highlighting a need for new therapeutic approaches. Histone deacetylase inhibitors (HDACi) are novel therapeutics being clinically-evaluated in combination with a variety of other drugs. However, rational selection of companion therapeutics for HDACi is difficult due to their poorly-understood, cell-type specific mechanisms of action. To address this, we developed a pre-clinical model system of sensitivity and resistance to the HDACi belinostat using DLBCL cell lines. In the current study, we demonstrate that cell lines sensitive to the cytotoxic effects of HDACi undergo early mitotic arrest prior to apoptosis. In contrast, HDACi-resistant cell lines complete mitosis after a short delay and arrest in G1. To force mitotic arrest in HDACi-resistant cell lines, we used low dose vincristine or paclitaxel in combination with belinostat and observed synergistic cytotoxicity. Belinostat curtails vincristine-induced mitotic arrest and triggers a strong apoptotic response associated with downregulated MCL-1 expression and upregulated BIM expression. Resistance to microtubule targeting agents (MTAs) has been associated with their propensity to induce polyploidy and thereby increase the probability of genomic instability that enables cancer progression. Co-treatment with belinostat effectively eliminated a vincristine-induced, actively cycling polyploid cell population. Our study demonstrates that vincristine sensitizes DLBCL cells to the cytotoxic effects of belinostat and that belinostat prevents polyploidy that could cause vincristine resistance. Our findings provide a rationale for using low dose MTAs in conjunction with HDACi as a potential therapeutic strategy for treatment of aggressive DLBCL.

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