TY - JOUR
T1 - Chemical Interrogation of Nuclear Size Identifies Compounds with Cancer Cell Line-Specific Effects on Migration and Invasion
AU - Tollis, Sylvain
AU - Rizzotto, Andrea
AU - Pham, Nhan T.
AU - Koivukoski, Sonja
AU - Sivakumar, Aishwarya
AU - Shave, Steven
AU - Wildenhain, Jan
AU - Zuleger, Nikolaj
AU - Keys, Jeremy T.
AU - Culley, Jayne
AU - Zheng, Yijing
AU - Lammerding, Jan
AU - Carragher, Neil O.
AU - Brunton, Valerie G.
AU - Latonen, Leena
AU - Auer, Manfred
AU - Tyers, Mike
AU - Schirmer, Eric C.
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was principally supported by Wellcome grants 095209 (E.C.S.) and 085178 (M.T.), the European Research Council SCG-233457 (M.T.), the Canadian Institutes of Health Research FDN-167277 (M.T.), a Canada Research Chair in Systems and Synthetic Biology (M.T.), and Medical Research Council MR/R018073/1 to E.C.S. This work was also supported by the Sigrid Jusélius Foundation (S.T., L.L.), the Cancer Society of Finland (L.L.), the Foundation of the Finnish Cancer Institute (L.L.), and the Academy of Finland 317871 (L.L.). It was also supported by Wellcome Centre for Cell Biology 092076, the National Institutes of Health R01GM137605, R01HL082792, and U54CA210184 (J.L.), the Department of Defense Breast Cancer Research Program Breakthrough Award BC150580 (J.L.), and the National Science Foundation CAREER Award CBET-1254846 (J.L.). A.R. was supported by a Darwin Trust Studentship and J.T.K. from the Knight@KIC 2018–2019 Graduate Fellowship. This work was performed in part at the Cornell NanoScale Science & Technology Facility (CNF), a member of the National Nanotechnology Coordinated Infrastructure (NNCI), which is supported by the National Science Foundation (Grant NNCI-1542081).
Publisher Copyright:
© The Authors. Published by 2022 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2022/3/18
Y1 - 2022/3/18
N2 - Background: Lower survival rates for many cancer types correlate with changes in nuclear size/scaling in a tumor-type/tissue-specific manner. Hypothesizing that such changes might confer an advantage to tumor cells, we aimed at the identification of commercially available compounds to guide further mechanistic studies. We therefore screened for Food and Drug Administration (FDA)/European Medicines Agency (EMA)-approved compounds that reverse the direction of characteristic tumor nuclear size changes in PC3, HCT116, and H1299 cell lines reflecting, respectively, prostate adenocarcinoma, colonic adenocarcinoma, and small-cell squamous lung cancer. Results: We found distinct, largely nonoverlapping sets of compounds that rectify nuclear size changes for each tumor cell line. Several classes of compounds including, e.g., serotonin uptake inhibitors, cyclo-oxygenase inhibitors, β-adrenergic receptor agonists, and Na+/K+ ATPase inhibitors, displayed coherent nuclear size phenotypes focused on a particular cell line or across cell lines and treatment conditions. Several compounds from classes far afield from current chemotherapy regimens were also identified. Seven nuclear size-rectifying compounds selected for further investigation all inhibited cell migration and/or invasion. Conclusions: Our study provides (a) proof of concept that nuclear size might be a valuable target to reduce cell migration/invasion in cancer treatment and (b) the most thorough collection of tool compounds to date reversing nuclear size changes specific to individual cancer-type cell lines. Although these compounds still need to be tested in primary cancer cells, the cell line-specific nuclear size and migration/invasion responses to particular drug classes suggest that cancer type-specific nuclear size rectifiers may help reduce metastatic spread.
AB - Background: Lower survival rates for many cancer types correlate with changes in nuclear size/scaling in a tumor-type/tissue-specific manner. Hypothesizing that such changes might confer an advantage to tumor cells, we aimed at the identification of commercially available compounds to guide further mechanistic studies. We therefore screened for Food and Drug Administration (FDA)/European Medicines Agency (EMA)-approved compounds that reverse the direction of characteristic tumor nuclear size changes in PC3, HCT116, and H1299 cell lines reflecting, respectively, prostate adenocarcinoma, colonic adenocarcinoma, and small-cell squamous lung cancer. Results: We found distinct, largely nonoverlapping sets of compounds that rectify nuclear size changes for each tumor cell line. Several classes of compounds including, e.g., serotonin uptake inhibitors, cyclo-oxygenase inhibitors, β-adrenergic receptor agonists, and Na+/K+ ATPase inhibitors, displayed coherent nuclear size phenotypes focused on a particular cell line or across cell lines and treatment conditions. Several compounds from classes far afield from current chemotherapy regimens were also identified. Seven nuclear size-rectifying compounds selected for further investigation all inhibited cell migration and/or invasion. Conclusions: Our study provides (a) proof of concept that nuclear size might be a valuable target to reduce cell migration/invasion in cancer treatment and (b) the most thorough collection of tool compounds to date reversing nuclear size changes specific to individual cancer-type cell lines. Although these compounds still need to be tested in primary cancer cells, the cell line-specific nuclear size and migration/invasion responses to particular drug classes suggest that cancer type-specific nuclear size rectifiers may help reduce metastatic spread.
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U2 - 10.1021/acschembio.2c00004
DO - 10.1021/acschembio.2c00004
M3 - Article
C2 - 35199530
AN - SCOPUS:85125952935
SN - 1554-8929
VL - 17
SP - 680
EP - 700
JO - ACS chemical biology
JF - ACS chemical biology
IS - 3
ER -