Differential effects of staurosporine analogues on cell cycle, growth and viability in A549 cells

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Abstract

Staurosporine is a potent but non-specific kinase inhibitor. It has served as synthetic template for a variety of analogues with high specificity for protein kinase C (PKC). Here staurosporine and four PKC-selective analogues, the indolocarbazoles, UCN-01 and CGP 41251, and the bisindolylmaleimides, Ro 31-8220 and GF 109203X, were investigated as growth inhibitors of human-derived A549 human lung adenocarcinoma cells. They were compared with respect to (1) effect on the cell cycle, (2) time dependency of growth arrest and (3) cytotoxic potency. Cells were exposed for 1, 2 and 4 days, or for 6, 12 and 24 h in the case of cycle-synchronised cells, to staurosporine analogues at concentrations at which they inhibited growth by 80% after 4 day exposure. Staurosporine and UCN-01 retarded cells in G(0/1), and CGP 41251 appeared to inhibit cell growth without cell cycle specificity. Ro 31-8220 slowed progression of synchronised cells through the cycle; over a longer time period it induced a weak block in G2/M. GF 109203X induced potent G2/M arrest in synchronised cells. This was not so apparent in asynchronous cells, which by day 4 were slowed in G(0/1) instead. Growth arrest induced by these inhibitors was more potent after incubation for 4 rather than 2 days. Incubation for 1 day followed by maintenance in drug-free medium for 3 days was sufficient to exert some cytostasis. The differences between cytotoxic and cytostatic concentrations, the former measured by release from cells of lactate dehydrogenase, were 15 000-fold for staurosporine, 300-fold for UCN-01, ~400-fold for CGP 41251, 25-fold for Ro 31-8220 and ~4-fold for GF 109203X. The results show that PKC-selective staurosporine analogues differ with respect to the mechanisms by which they interfere with the cell cycle. The necessity of long-term exposure for effective growth inhibition and the considerable margin between cytostatic and acute cytotoxic indolocarbazole concentrations are findings which might influence the planning and interpretation of clinical trials of these kinase inhibitors.

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Courage, C., Snowden, R., & Gescher, A. (1996). Differential effects of staurosporine analogues on cell cycle, growth and viability in A549 cells. British Journal of Cancer, 74(8), 1199–1205. https://doi.org/10.1038/bjc.1996.517

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