Suberoylanilide hydroxamic acid potentiates apoptosis, inhibits invasion, and abolishes osteoclastogenesis by suppressing nuclear factor-κB activation

118Citations
Citations of this article
31Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

This article is free to access.

Abstract

Because of its ability to suppress tumor cell proliferation, angiogenesis, and inflammation, the histone deacetylase inhibitor suberoylanilide hydroxamic acid (SAHA) is currently in clinical trials. How SAHA mediates its effects is poorly understood. We found that in several human cancer cell lines, SAHA potentiated the apoptosis induced by tumor necrosis factor (TNF) and chemotherapeutic agents and inhibited TNF-induced invasion and receptor activator of NF-κB ligand-induced osteoclastogenesis, all of which are known to require NF-κB activation. These observations corresponded with the down-regulation of the expression of anti-apoptotic (IAP1, IAP2, X chromosome-linked IAP, Bcl-2, Bcl-x L, TRAF1, FLIP, and survivin), proliferative (cyclin D1, cyclooxygenase 2, and c-Myc), and angiogenic (ICAM-1, matrix metalloproteinase-9, and vascular endothelial growth factor) gene products. Because several of these genes are regulated by NF-κB, we postulated that SAHA mediates its effects by modulating NF-κB and found that SAHA suppressed NF-κB activation induced by TNF, IL-1β, okadaic acid, doxorubicin, lipopolysaccharide, H 2O 2, phorbol myristate acetate, and cigarette smoke; the suppression was not cell type-specific because both inducible and constitutive NF-κB activation was inhibited. We also found that SAHA had no effect on direct binding of NF-κB to the DNA but inhibited sequentially the TNF-induced activation of IκBα kinase, IκBα phosphorylation, IκBα ubiquitination, IκBα degradation, p65 phosphorylation, and p65 nuclear translocation. Furthermore, SAHA inhibited the NF-κB-dependent reporter gene expression activated by TNF, TNFR1, TRADD, TRAF2, NF-κB-inducing kinase, IκBα kinase, and the p65 subunit of NF-κB. Overall, our results indicated that NF-κB and NF-κB-regulated gene expression inhibited by SAHA can enhance apoptosis and inhibit invasion and osteoclastogenesis. © 2006 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Takada, Y., Gillenwater, A., Ichikawa, H., & Aggarwal, B. B. (2006). Suberoylanilide hydroxamic acid potentiates apoptosis, inhibits invasion, and abolishes osteoclastogenesis by suppressing nuclear factor-κB activation. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 281(9), 5612–5622. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M507213200

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free