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. 2009 Sep 1;8(17):2810-8.
doi: 10.4161/cc.8.17.9503. Epub 2009 Sep 13.

Specific activation of the p53 pathway by low dose actinomycin D: a new route to p53 based cyclotherapy

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Specific activation of the p53 pathway by low dose actinomycin D: a new route to p53 based cyclotherapy

Meng Ling Choong et al. Cell Cycle. .

Abstract

The activation of p53 has been proposed as a novel anti-cancer treatment in two distinct contexts. In the first activation of p53 in tumor cells can promote apoptosis and senescence and enhance the anti-tumor activity of cytotoxic chemotherapeutic drugs. In the second application activation of p53 in normal tissues can cause a reversible cell cycle arrest that can be used to protect normal cells from the action of anti-mitotics. In this cyclotherapy role p53 mutant tumor cells are not arrested and remain sensitive to anti-mitotics. The advent of specific p53 activating molecules such as nutlin-3 has encouraged both approaches. We have sought for a clinically approved drug that can mimic nutlin-3. We show here that low doses of actinomycin D mimic nutlin-3 in the highly specific activation of p53 dependant transcription, in the induction of a reversible protective growth arrest in normal cells and in the enhancement of the activity of chemotherapeutic drug induced killing of p53 positive human tumor cells. While high doses of actinomycin D reveal its more non-specific activities, low doses of the drug will allow exploration of the value of p53 activation in preclinical and clinical models before nutlin-3 like drugs are approved.

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