Author
Listed:
- Victor S Goldmacher
- Charlene A Audette
- Yinghua Guan
- Eriene-Heidi Sidhom
- Jagesh V Shah
- Kathleen R Whiteman
- Yelena V Kovtun
Abstract
The microtubule-targeting maytansinoids accumulate in cells and induce mitotic arrest at 250- to 1000-fold lower concentrations than those required for their association with tubulin or microtubules. To identify the mechanisms of this intracellular accumulation and exceptional cytotoxicity of maytansinoids we studied interaction of a highly cytotoxic maytansinoid, S-methyl DM1 and several other maytansinoids with cells. S-methyl DM1 accumulated inside the cells with a markedly higher apparent affinity than to tubulin or microtubules. The apparent affinities of maytansinoids correlated with their cytotoxicities. The number of intracellular binding sites for S-methyl DM1 in MCF7 cells was comparable to the number of tubulin molecules per cell (~ 4–6 × 107 copies). Efflux of 3 [H]-S-methyl DM1 from cells was enhanced in the presence of an excess of non-labeled S-methyl DM1, indicating that re-binding of 3 [H]-S-methyl DM1 to intracellular binding sites contributed to its intracellular retention. Liposomes loaded with non-polymerized tubulin recapitulated the apparent high-affinity association of S-methyl DM1 to cells. We propose a model for the intracellular accumulation of maytansinoids in which molecules of the compounds diffuse into a cell and associate with tubulin. Affinities of maytansinoids for individual tubulin molecules are weak, but the high intracellular concentration of tubulin favors, after dissociation of a compound-tubulin complex, their re-binding to a tubulin molecule, or to a tip of a microtubule in the same cell, over their efflux. As a result, a significant fraction of microtubule tips is occupied with a maytansinoid when added to cells at sub-nanomolar concentrations, inducing mitotic arrest and cell death.
Suggested Citation
Victor S Goldmacher & Charlene A Audette & Yinghua Guan & Eriene-Heidi Sidhom & Jagesh V Shah & Kathleen R Whiteman & Yelena V Kovtun, 2015.
"High-Affinity Accumulation of a Maytansinoid in Cells via Weak Tubulin Interaction,"
PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 10(2), pages 1-16, February.
Handle:
RePEc:plo:pone00:0117523
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0117523
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