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Dive into the research topics where Roy M. Golsteyn is active.

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Featured researches published by Roy M. Golsteyn.


PLOS ONE | 2007

Inhibition of Chk1 kills tetraploid tumor cells through a p53-dependent pathway.

Ilio Vitale; Lorenzo Galluzzi; Sonia Vivet; Lisa Nanty; Philippe Dessen; Laura Senovilla; Ken André Olaussen; Vladimir Lazar; Michelle Prudhomme; Roy M. Golsteyn; Maria Castedo; Guido Kroemer

Tetraploidy constitutes an adaptation to stress and an intermediate step between euploidy and aneuploidy in oncogenesis. Tetraploid cells are particularly resistant against genotoxic stress including radiotherapy and chemotherapy. Here, we designed a strategy to preferentially kill tetraploid tumor cells. Depletion of checkpoint kinase-1 (Chk1) by siRNAs, transfection with dominant-negative Chk1 mutants or pharmacological Chk1 inhibition killed tetraploid colon cancer cells yet had minor effects on their diploid counterparts. Chk1 inhibition abolished the spindle assembly checkpoint and caused premature and abnormal mitoses that led to p53 activation and cell death at a higher frequency in tetraploid than in diploid cells. Similarly, abolition of the spindle checkpoint by knockdown of Bub1, BubR1 or Mad2 induced p53-dependent apoptosis of tetraploid cells. Chk1 inhibition reversed the cisplatin resistance of tetraploid cells in vitro and in vivo, in xenografted human cancers. Chk1 inhibition activated p53-regulated transcripts including Puma/BBC3 in tetraploid but not in diploid tumor cells. Altogether, our results demonstrate that, in tetraploid tumor cells, the inhibition of Chk1 sequentially triggers aberrant mitosis, p53 activation and Puma/BBC3-dependent mitochondrial apoptosis.


International Journal of Molecular Sciences | 2014

Genotoxic Anti-Cancer Agents and Their Relationship to DNA Damage, Mitosis, and Checkpoint Adaptation in Proliferating Cancer Cells

Lucy H. Swift; Roy M. Golsteyn

When a human cell detects damaged DNA, it initiates the DNA damage response (DDR) that permits it to repair the damage and avoid transmitting it to daughter cells. Despite this response, changes to the genome occur and some cells, such as proliferating cancer cells, are prone to genome instability. The cellular processes that lead to genomic changes after a genotoxic event are not well understood. Our research focuses on the relationship between genotoxic cancer drugs and checkpoint adaptation, which is the process of mitosis with damaged DNA. We examine the types of DNA damage induced by widely used cancer drugs and describe their effects upon proliferating cancer cells. There is evidence that cell death caused by genotoxic cancer drugs in some cases includes exiting a DNA damage cell cycle arrest and entry into mitosis. Furthermore, some cells are able to survive this process at a time when the genome is most susceptible to change or rearrangement. Checkpoint adaptation is poorly characterised in human cells; we predict that increasing our understanding of this pathway may help to understand genomic instability in cancer cells and provide insight into methods to improve the efficacy of current cancer therapies.


Cell Cycle | 2009

Radiosensitization by Chir-124, a selective CHK1 inhibitor: effects of p53 and cell cycle checkpoints.

Yungan Tao; Céline Leteur; Ceyao Yang; Ping Zhang; Maria Castedo; Alain Pierré; Roy M. Golsteyn; Jean Bourhis; Guido Kroemer; Eric Deutsch

Checkpoint kinase-1 (CHK1) is a key regulator of the DNA damage-elicited G2-M checkpoints. The aim of the present study was to investigate the effects of a selective CHK1 inhibitor, Chir124, on cell survival and cell cycle progression following ionizing radiation (IR). Treatment with Chir-124 resulted in reduced clonogenic survival and abrogated the IR- induced G2-M arrest in a panel of isogenic HCT116 cell lines after IR. This radiosensitizing effect was relatively similar between p53-/- and p53-sufficient wild type (WT) HCT116 cells. However, the number of mitotic cells (as measured by assessing the phosphorylation of mitotic proteins) increased dramatically in p53-/- HCT116 cells after concomitant Chir-124 exposure, compared to IR alone, while no such effect was observed in p53-sufficient WT HCT116 cells. In p53-/- cells, Chir-124 treatment induced a marked accumulation of polyploid cells that were characterized by micronucleation or multinucleation. p21-/- HCT116 cells displayed a similar pattern of response as p53-/- cells. Chir-124 was able to radiosensitize HCT116 cells that lack checkpoint kinase-2 (CHK2) or that were deficient for the spindle checkpoint protein Mad2. Finally, Chir-124 could radiosensitize tetraploid cell lines, which were relatively resistant against DNA damaging agents. Altogether these results suggest that Chir-124-mediated radiosensitization is profoundly influenced by the p53 and cell cycle checkpoint system.


Cancer Research | 2006

Generation of Replication-Dependent Double-Strand Breaks by the Novel N2-G-Alkylator S23906-1

Stephane Leonce; Laurence Kraus-Berthier; Roy M. Golsteyn; Marie-Hélène David-Cordonnier; Christelle Tardy; Amélie Lansiaux; Virginie Poindessous; Annette K. Larsen; Alain Pierré

S23906-1, a new DNA alkylating agent that reacts with the exocyclic 2-NH2 group of guanine residues yielding monofunctional adducts, is currently under clinical evaluation in phase I trials. To investigate the mechanism of action of S23906-1, we compared parental KB-3-1 cells and KB/S23-500 cells that are 15-fold resistant to S23906-1. Cell death induced by 1 micromol/L S23906-1 in KB-3-1 cells was associated with their irreversible arrest in the G2-M phases of the cell cycle followed by apoptosis, whereas a proportion of the resistant KB/S23-500 cells were able to exit from the G2 arrest and divide, leading to a significantly lower rate of apoptosis. The attenuated apoptotic response was associated with decreased Chk2 protein phosphorylation, indicating that the DNA damage signaling pathways are more potently activated in the sensitive cells. However, similar rates of adduct formation and repair were measured in both cell lines. Exposure to S23906-1 induced a higher formation of DNA breaks, measured by the comet assay, in sensitive cells. In agreement, a histone H2AX phosphorylation assay revealed that S23906-1 induced double-strand breaks (DSB) in a dose- and time-dependent manner and that these were more persistent in the parental cells. These DSBs were found mainly in S-phase cells and inhibited by aphidicolin, suggesting that they are DNA replication-mediated DSBs. These results suggest that secondary DNA lesions play an important role in the cytotoxicity of this compound and make histone H2AX phosphorylation an attractive marker for monitoring the efficacy of S23906-1.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009

Synthesis and CHK1 inhibitory potency of Hymenialdisine analogues.

Jean-Gilles Parmentier; Bernard Portevin; Roy M. Golsteyn; Alain Pierré; John Hickman; Philippe Gloanec; Guillaume de Nanteuil

A series of thieno[3,2-b]pyrroloazepinones derivatives related to Hymenialdisine were prepared and tested for CHK1 inhibitory activity. Nanomolar inhibitions were achieved when electron-withdrawing substituents were introduced at position 3 of the thiophene ring.


Biochemical Journal | 2012

Human cells enter mitosis with damaged DNA after treatment with pharmacological concentrations of genotoxic agents.

Philip M. Kubara; Sophie Kernéis-Golsteyn; Aurélie Studény; Brittany B. Lanser; Laurent Meijer; Roy M. Golsteyn

In the present paper, we report that mitosis is a key step in the cellular response to genotoxic agents in human cells. Cells with damaged DNA recruit γH2AX (phosphorylated histone H2AX), phosphorylate Chk1 (checkpoint kinase 1) and arrest in the G2-phase of the cell cycle. Strikingly, nearly all cells escape the DNA damage checkpoint and become rounded, by a mechanism that correlates with Chk1 dephosphorylation. The rounded cells are alive and in mitosis as measured by low phospho-Tyr15 Cdk1 (cyclin-dependent kinase 1), high Cdk activity, active Plk1 (Polo-like kinase 1) and high phospho-histone H3 signals. This phenomenon is independent of the type of DNA damage, but is dependent on pharmacologically relevant doses of genotoxicity. Entry into mitosis is likely to be caused by checkpoint adaptation, and the HT-29 cell-based model provides a powerful experimental system in which to explore its molecular basis. We propose that mitosis with damaged DNA is a biologically significant event because it may cause genomic rearrangement in cells that survive genotoxic damage.


Cancer Letters | 2010

An unusual DNA binding compound, S23906, induces mitotic catastrophe in cultured human cells.

Nathalie Cahuzac; Aurélie Studény; Kris Marshall; Isabella Versteege; Kate Wetenhall; Bruno Pfeiffer; Stephane Leonce; John Hickman; Alain Pierré; Roy M. Golsteyn

The biochemical pathways that lead cells to mitotic catastrophe are not well understood. To identify these pathways, we have taken an approach of treating cells with a novel genotoxic compound and characterizing whether cells enter mitotic catastrophe or not. S23906 is a novel acronycine derivative that forms adducts with the N2 residue of guanine in the minor groove of the DNA helix and destabilizes base pairing to cause helix opening. We observed, in HeLa and HT-29 cells, that S23906 induced gamma-H2AX and activated checkpoint kinase 1, as did bleomycin, camptothecin, and cisplatin, when tested under equi-toxic conditions. S23906 also induced cyclin E1 protein, although this activity was not required for cytotoxicity because knock down of cyclin E1 by RNA interference did not affect the number of dead cells after treatment. Cyclin B1 levels first decreased and then increased after treatment with S23906. Cyclin B1 was associated with Cdk1 kinase activity, which correlated with an increase in the number of mitotic cells. By 32 h after treatment, at least 20% of the cells entered mitotic catastrophe as determined by microscopy. Suppression of the DNA checkpoint response by co-treatment with caffeine increased the number of cells in mitosis. These results suggest that mitotic catastrophe is one of the cellular responses to S23906 and that mitotic catastrophe may be a common cellular response to many different types of DNA damage.


Anti-cancer Agents in Medicinal Chemistry | 2008

Pyrrolocarbazoles as Checkpoint 1 Kinase Inhibitors

Hélène Hénon; Elisabeth Conchon; Bernadette Hugon; Samir Messaoudi; Roy M. Golsteyn; Michelle Prudhomme

The carbazole framework is found in many natural compounds of biological interest. Indolocarbazoles such as rebeccamycin and staurosporine which are either a topoisomerase I inhibitor (rebeccamycin) or a non selective kinase inhibitor (staurosporine) are bacterial metabolites. In the search for new antitumor agents, DNA damage checkpoint kinases, in particular Checkpoint kinase 1, have recently emerged as attractive targets for cancer therapy. This review reports the synthesis and Chk1 inhibitory activities of pyrrolocarbazole compounds bearing four or five fused rings.


FEBS Letters | 2013

A western blot assay to measure cyclin dependent kinase activity in cells or in vitro without the use of radioisotopes

Cody W. Lewis; Ryan G. Taylor; Philip M. Kubara; Kris Marshall; Laurent Meijer; Roy M. Golsteyn

We developed a quantitative method to measure the activity of cyclin‐dependent kinases (Cdks) by western blotting, without radioisotopes. We prepared a recombinant protein substrate based upon the natural Cdk1 substrate, PP1Cα. By combining this substrate in a western blot method using fluorochrome based antibodies and phospho‐imager analysis, we measured the Km of ATP binding to Cdk1 to be 3.5 μM. We then measured Cdk1 activity in cell extracts from interphase or mitotic cells, and demonstrated that previously identified Cdk inhibitors could be detected by this assay. Our data show that we have a safe, reliable assay to identify Cdk1 inhibitors and measure Cdk1 activity.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2008

Synthesis, checkpoint kinase 1 inhibitory properties and in vitro antiproliferative activities of new pyrrolocarbazoles

Elisabeth Conchon; Fabrice Anizon; Bettina Aboab; Roy M. Golsteyn; Stephane Leonce; Bruno Pfeiffer; Michelle Prudhomme

In the course of structure-activity relationship studies on granulatimide analogues, new pyrrolo[3,4-c]carbazoles have been synthesized in which the imidazole heterocycle was replaced by a five-membered ring lactam system or a dimethylcyclopentanedione. Moreover, the synthesis of an original structure in which a sugar moiety is attached to the indole nitrogen and to a six-membered D ring via an oxygen is reported. The inhibitory activities of the newly synthesized compounds toward checkpoint kinase 1 and their in vitro antiproliferative activities toward three tumor cell lines: murine leukemia L1210, and human colon carcinoma HT29 and HCT116 are described.

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Bruno Pfeiffer

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Fabrice Anizon

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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John Hickman

University of Manchester

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Alain Pierre

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Pierre Renard

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Lucy H. Swift

University of Lethbridge

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