Unbound MEDLINE

Evidence that mitotic exit is a better cancer therapeutic target than spindle assembly. Cancer cell [Cancer Cell] Journal article

 
TitleEvidence that mitotic exit is a better cancer therapeutic target than spindle assembly.
Author(s)Huang HC, Shi J, Orth JD, Mitchison TJ 
InstitutionDepartment of Systems Biology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02215, USA. hsiao-chun_huang@hms.harvard.edu
SourceCancer Cell 2009 Oct 6; 16(4):347-58.
AbstractCurrent antimitotics work by perturbing spindle assembly, which activates the spindle assembly checkpoint, causes mitotic arrest, and triggers apoptosis. Cancer cells can resist such killing by premature exit, before cells initiate apoptosis, due to a weak checkpoint or rapid slippage. We reasoned blocking mitotic exit downstream of the checkpoint might circumvent this resistance. Using single-cell approaches, we showed that blocking mitotic exit by Cdc20 knockdown slowed cyclin B1 proteolysis, thus allowed more time for death initiation. Killing by Cdc20 knockdown did not require checkpoint activity and can occur by intrinsic apoptosis or an alternative death pathway when Bcl2 was overexpressed. We conclude targeting Cdc20, or otherwise blocking mitotic exit, may be a better cancer therapeutic strategy than perturbing spindle assembly.
Languageeng
Pub Type(s)Journal Article
Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
PubMed ID19800579
  
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