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Effects of the protein kinase inhibitors wortmannin and KN62 on cellular radiosensitivity and radiation-activated S phase and G1/S checkpoints in normal human fibroblasts
Authors
AMR Taylor
B Palcic
+32 more
BD Price
BR Young
G Powis
H Beamish
H Huang
H Nagasawa
H Tokumitsu
J Brugarolas
K Komatsu
K Savitsky
KE Rosenzweig
KK Khanna
KO Hartley
M Jung
M Mayford
M Olivier
MB Kastan
MF Lavin
MS Meyn
R Mirzayans
R Mirzayans
R Mirzayans
R Mirzayans
RB Painter
RG Shao
RP Sedgwick
S Banin
S Nakanishi
SE Morgan
WA Cliby
WS El-Deiry
Y Wang
Publication date
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Doi
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on
PubMed
Abstract
Wortmannin is a potent inhibitor of phosphatidylinositol (PI) 3-kinase and PI 3-kinase-related proteins (e.g. ATM), but it does not inhibit the activity of purified calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII). In the present study, we compared the effects of wortmannin and the CaMKII inhibitor KN62 on the response of normal human dermal fibroblast cultures to γ radiation. We demonstrate that wortmannin confers a phenotype on normal fibroblasts remarkably similar to that characteristic of cells homozygous for the ATM mutation. Thus wortmannin-treated normal fibroblasts exhibit increased sensitivity to radiation-induced cell killing, lack of temporary block in transition from G1 to S phase following irradiation (i.e. impaired G1/S checkpoint), and radioresistant DNA synthesis (i.e. impaired S phase checkpoint). Wortmannin-treated cultures display a diminished capacity for radiation-induced up-regulation of p53 protein and expression of p21WAF1, a p53-regulated gene involved in cell cycle arrest at the G1/S border; the treated cultures also exhibit decreased capacity for enhancement of CaMKII activity post-irradiation, known to be necessary for triggering the S phase checkpoint. We further demonstrate that KN62 confers a radioresistant DNA synthesis phenotype on normal fibroblasts and moderately potentiates their sensitivity to killing by γ rays, without modulating G1/S checkpoint, p53 up-regulation and p21WAF1 expression following radiation exposure. We conclude that CaMKII is involved in the radiation responsive signalling pathway mediating S phase checkpoint but not in the p53-dependent pathway controlling G1/S checkpoint, and that a wortmannin-sensitive kinase functions upstream in both pathways. © 1999 Cancer Research Campaig
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Last time updated on 03/12/2019