Co-reporter:Zhaoshi Bai, Meiqi Gao, Huijuan Zhang, Qi Guan, Jingwen Xu, Yao Li, Huan Qi, Zhengqiang Li, Daiying Zuo, Weige Zhang, Yingliang Wu
Cancer Letters 2017 Volume 402(Volume 402) pp:
Publication Date(Web):28 August 2017
DOI:10.1016/j.canlet.2017.05.016
•BZML, as a novel CBSIs, has broad spectrum cytotoxic activity against various chemo-sensitive or -resistant cancer cells.•BZML is not a P-gp substrate and acts as an irreversible inhibitor of P-gp function in A549/Taxol cells.•BZML causes mitosis phase arrest by inhibiting tubulin polymerization in A549 and A549/Taxol cells.•BZML induces MC in A549/Taxol cells, which is different from apoptosis in A549 cells, to against apoptosis-resistance.Multidrug resistance (MDR) interferes with the efficiency of chemotherapy. Therefore, developing novel anti-cancer agents that can overcome MDR is necessary. Here, we screened a series of colchicine binding site inhibitors (CBSIs) and found that 5-(3, 4, 5-trimethoxybenzoyl)-4-methyl-2-(p-tolyl) imidazol (BZML) displayed potent cytotoxic activity against both A549 and A549/Taxol cells. We further explored the underlying mechanisms and found that BZML caused mitosis phase arrest by inhibiting tubulin polymerization in A549 and A549/Taxol cells. Importantly, BZML was a poor substrate for P-glycoprotein (P-gp) and inhibited P-gp function by decreasing P-gp expression at the protein and mRNA levels. Cell morphology changes and the expression of cycle- or apoptosis-related proteins indicated that BZML mainly drove A549/Taxol cells to die by mitotic catastrophe (MC), a p53-independent apoptotic-like cell death, whereas induced A549 cells to die by apoptosis. Taken together, our data suggest that BZML is a novel colchicine binding site inhibitor and overcomes MDR in A549/Taxol cells by inhibiting P-gp function and inducing MC. Our study also offers a new strategy to solve the problem of apoptosis-resistance.