Tatiana Cañeque
Curie Institute
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Publication
Featured researches published by Tatiana Cañeque.
Nature Chemistry | 2017
Trang Thi Mai; Ahmed Hamaï; Antje Hienzsch; Tatiana Cañeque; Sebastian Müller; Julien Wicinski; Olivier Cabaud; Christine Leroy; Amandine David; Verónica Acevedo; Akihide Ryo; Christophe Ginestier; Daniel Birnbaum; Emmanuelle Charafe-Jauffret; Patrice Codogno; Maryam Mehrpour; Raphaël Rodriguez
Cancer stem cells (CSCs) represent a subset of cells within tumours that exhibit self-renewal properties and the capacity to seed tumours. CSCs are typically refractory to conventional treatments and have been associated to metastasis and relapse. Salinomycin operates as a selective agent against CSCs through mechanisms that remain elusive. Here, we provide evidence that a synthetic derivative of salinomycin, which we named ironomycin (AM5), exhibits a more potent and selective activity against breast CSCs in vitro and in vivo, by accumulating and sequestering iron in lysosomes. In response to the ensuing cytoplasmic depletion of iron, cells triggered the degradation of ferritin in lysosomes, leading to further iron loading in this organelle. Iron-mediated production of reactive oxygen species promoted lysosomal membrane permeabilization, activating a cell death pathway consistent with ferroptosis. These findings reveal the prevalence of iron homeostasis in breast CSCs, pointing towards iron and iron-mediated processes as potential targets against these cells. Cancer stem cells are typically refractory to conventional treatments. Now, an unprecedented mechanism has been discovered by which salinomycin and derivatives can sequester iron in lysosomes leading to cytoplasmic iron depletion and the subsequent production of reactive oxygen species that are lethal to the cell. This discovery of the importance of iron in cancer stem cell maintenance provides an opportunity for developing new therapeutics.
Science | 2017
Dean Tyler; Johanna Vappiani; Tatiana Cañeque; Enid Y. N. Lam; Aoife Ward; Omer Gilan; Yih-Chih Chan; Antje Hienzsch; Anna Rutkowska; Thilo Werner; Anne J. Wagner; Dave Lugo; Richard Gregory; César Ramírez Molina; Neil Stuart Garton; Christopher Roland Wellaway; Susan Jackson; Laura MacPherson; Margarida Figueiredo; Sabine Stolzenburg; Charles C. Bell; Colin M. House; Sarah-Jane Dawson; Edwin D. Hawkins; Gerard Drewes; Rab K. Prinjha; Raphaël Rodriguez; Paola Grandi; Mark A. Dawson
Are better drugs just a click away? Drugs that show promise in preclinical models often fail in the clinic, in part because of limited information on drug localization within cells and across tissues. In a proof-of-concept study, Tyler et al. applied click chemistry methods to study the localization of bromodomain inhibitors. These are cancer drugs that alter chromatin structure and gene expression. Clickable derivatives of the drugs localized within chromatin and showed that the drugs exhibit distinct modes of binding at responsive and unresponsive genes. In a mouse leukemia model, the click-probes revealed that the drugs accumulate to different extents in the spleen and bone marrow, which are two tissue sources of leukemic cells. Science, this issue p. 1397 Conversion of an epigenetic drug into a probe amenable to click chemistry allows visualization of the drug’s activity in vivo. The success of new therapies hinges on our ability to understand their molecular and cellular mechanisms of action. We modified BET bromodomain inhibitors, an epigenetic-based therapy, to create functionally conserved compounds that are amenable to click chemistry and can be used as molecular probes in vitro and in vivo. We used click proteomics and click sequencing to explore the gene regulatory function of BRD4 (bromodomain containing protein 4) and the transcriptional changes induced by BET inhibitors. In our studies of mouse models of acute leukemia, we used high-resolution microscopy and flow cytometry to highlight the heterogeneity of drug activity within tumor cells located in different tissue compartments. We also demonstrate the differential distribution and effects of BET inhibitors in normal and malignant cells in vivo. This study provides a potential framework for the preclinical assessment of a wide range of drugs.
Nature Chemistry | 2015
Tatiana Cañeque; Filipe Gomes; Trang Thi Mai; Giovanni Maestri; Max Malacria; Raphaël Rodriguez
Anthracyclines such as doxorubicin are used extensively in the treatment of cancers. Anthraquinone-related angucyclines also exhibit antiproliferative properties and have been proposed to operate via similar mechanisms, including direct genome targeting. Here, we report the chemical synthesis of marmycin A and the study of its cellular activity. The aromatic core was constructed by means of a one-pot multistep reaction comprising a regioselective Diels-Alder cycloaddition, and the complex sugar backbone was introduced through a copper-catalysed Ullmann cross-coupling, followed by a challenging Friedel-Crafts cyclization. Remarkably, fluorescence microscopy revealed that marmycin A does not target the nucleus but instead accumulates in lysosomes, thereby promoting cell death independently of genome targeting. Furthermore, a synthetic dimer of marmycin A and the lysosome-targeting agent artesunate exhibited a synergistic activity against the invasive MDA-MB-231 cancer cell line. These findings shed light on the elusive pathways through which anthraquinone derivatives act in cells, pointing towards unanticipated biological and therapeutic applications.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017
Nathan S. Abell; Marvin Mercado; Tatiana Cañeque; Raphaël Rodriguez; Blerta Xhemalce
Enoxacin is a small molecule that stimulates RNA interference (RNAi) and acts as a growth inhibitor selectively in cancer but not in untransformed cells. Here, we used alkenox, a clickable enoxacin surrogate, coupled with quantitative mass spectrometry, to identify PIWIL3 as a mechanistic target of enoxacin. PIWIL3 is an Argonaute protein of the PIWI subfamily that is mainly expressed in the germline and that mediates RNAi through piRNAs. Our results suggest that cancer cells re-express PIWIL3 to repress RNAi through miRNAs and thus open a new opportunity for cancer-specific targeting.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2017
Cecilia Patitucci; Gabrielle Couchy; Alessia Bagattin; Tatiana Cañeque; Aurélien de Reyniès; Jean-Yves Scoazec; Raphaël Rodriguez; Marco Pontoglio; Jessica Zucman-Rossi; Mario Pende; Ganna Panasyuk
Worldwide epidemics of metabolic diseases, including liver steatosis, are associated with an increased frequency of malignancies, showing the highest positive correlation for liver cancer. The heterogeneity of liver cancer represents a clinical challenge. In liver, the transcription factor PPAR&ggr; promotes metabolic adaptations of lipogenesis and aerobic glycolysis under the control of Akt2 activity, but the role of PPAR&ggr; in liver tumorigenesis is unknown. Here we have combined preclinical mouse models of liver cancer and genetic studies of a human liver biopsy atlas with the aim of identifying putative therapeutic targets in the context of liver steatosis and cancer. We have revealed a protumoral interaction of Akt2 signaling with hepatocyte nuclear factor 1&agr; (HNF1&agr;) and PPAR&ggr;, transcription factors that are master regulators of hepatocyte and adipocyte differentiation, respectively. Akt2 phosphorylates and inhibits HNF1&agr;, thus relieving the suppression of hepatic PPAR&ggr; expression and promoting tumorigenesis. Finally, we observed that pharmacological inhibition of PPAR&ggr; is therapeutically effective in a preclinical murine model of steatosis-associated liver cancer. Taken together, our studies in humans and mice reveal that Akt2 controls hepatic tumorigenesis through crosstalk between HNF1&agr; and PPAR&ggr;.
Autophagy | 2017
Ahmed Hamaï; Tatiana Cañeque; Sebastian Müller; Trang Thi Mai; Antje Hienzsch; Christophe Ginestier; Emmanuelle Charafe-Jauffret; Patrice Codogno; Maryam Mehrpour; Raphaël Rodriguez
Abstract The paradigm of cancer stem cells (CSCs) defines the existence of cells exhibiting self-renewal and tumor-seeding capacity. These cells have been associated with tumor relapse and are typically resistant to conventional chemotherapeutic agents. Over the past decade, chemical biology studies have revealed a significant number of small molecules able to alter the proliferation of these cells in various settings. The natural product salinomycin has emerged as the most promising anti-CSC agent. However, an explicit mechanism of action has not yet been characterized, in particular due to the pleiotropic responses salinomycin is known for. In this punctum, we describe our recent discovery that salinomycin and the more potent synthetic derivative we named ironomycin sequester lysosomal iron. We found that these compounds, by blocking iron translocation, induce an iron-depletion response leading to a lysosomal degradation of ferritin followed by an iron-mediated lysosomal production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and a cell death pathway that resembles ferroptosis. These unprecedented findings identified iron homeostasis and iron-mediated processes as potentially druggable in the context of CSCs.
Biochemistry | 2017
Sarah Benabdi; François Peurois; Agata Nawrotek; Jahnavi Chikireddy; Tatiana Cañeque; Takao Yamori; Isamu Shiina; Y. Ohashi; Shingo Dan; Raphaël Rodriguez; Jacqueline Cherfils; Mahel Zeghouf
Arf GTPases and their guanine nucleotide exchange factors (ArfGEFs) are major regulators of membrane traffic and organelle structure in cells. They are associated with a variety of diseases and are thus attractive therapeutic targets for inhibition by small molecules. Several inhibitors of unrelated chemical structures have been discovered, which have shown their potential in dissecting molecular pathways and blocking disease-related functions. However, their specificity across the ArfGEF family has remained elusive. Importantly, inhibitory responses in the context of membranes, which are critical determinants of Arf and ArfGEF cellular functions, have not been investigated. Here, we compare the efficiency and specificity of four structurally distinct ArfGEF inhibitors, Brefeldin A, SecinH3, M-COPA, and NAV-2729, toward six ArfGEFs (human ARNO, EFA6, BIG1, and BRAG2 and Legionella and Rickettsia RalF). Inhibition was assessed by fluorescence kinetics using pure proteins, and its modulation by membranes was determined with lipidated GTPases in the presence of liposomes. Our analysis shows that despite the intra-ArfGEF family resemblance, each inhibitor has a specific inhibitory profile. Notably, M-COPA is a potent pan-ArfGEF inhibitor, and NAV-2729 inhibits all GEFs, the strongest effects being against BRAG2 and Arf1. Furthermore, the presence of the membrane-binding domain in Legionella RalF reveals a strong inhibitory effect of BFA that is not measured on its GEF domain alone. This study demonstrates the value of family-wide assays with incorporation of membranes, and it should enable accurate dissection of Arf pathways by these inhibitors to best guide their use and development as therapeutic agents.
Chemical Society Reviews | 2014
Tatiana Cañeque; F. M. Truscott; Raphaël Rodriguez; Giovanni Maestri; Max Malacria
Organic Letters | 2016
Giovanni Maestri; Tatiana Cañeque; Nicola Della Ca; Etienne Derat; Marta Catellani; Gian Paolo Chiusoli; Max Malacria
Israel Journal of Chemistry | 2017
Sebastian Müller; Tatiana Cañeque; Verónica Acevedo; Raphaël Rodriguez