Antiadhesive Effects of Grn163L - An Oligonucleotide N3 '-> P5 ' Thio-Phosphoramidate Targeting Telomerase
Date
2007Author
Jackson, Shalmica R.
Zhu, Chun-Hong
Paulson, Vera
Watkins, Linda
Dikmen, Z. Gunnur
Gryaznov, Sergei M.
Wright, Woodring L.
Shay, Jerry W.
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We determined previously that a novel human telomerase RNA (hTR) antagonist, GRN163L, inhibited the tumorigenic potential of A549-luciferase (A549-luc) lung cancer cells in vitro and in vivo. Further studies revealed that A549-luc cells were also morphologically altered by GRN163L. A549-luc cells treated before cell attachment with a single dose of GRN163L only weakly attached to the substrate and remained rounded, whereas control mismatch-treated cells exhibited typical epitheloid appearance and adhesion properties. These morphologic changes were independent of hilt expression and telomerase inhibition and were unrelated to telomere length. This effect is dependent on the molecular properties of the lipid moiety, the phosphorothioate backbone, and the presence of triplet-G sequences within the GRN1163L structure. Altered adhesion was manifested by a 50% reduction in rapid cellular attachment and a 3-fold decrease in total cell spreading surface area. Administration of a single dose of GRN163L (15 mg/kg) at the time of cell inoculation, using an in vivo model of lung cancer metastasis, resulted in significant reductions in tumor burden at days 13, 20, and 27 of tumor progression. Thus, the potent antimetastatic effects of GRN163L may be related, in part, to the antiadhesive effects of this novel cancer therapeutic conferred via specific structural determinants and that these effects are independent of telomerase inhibition or telomere shortening.