Objectives: This study was performed to explore the strategy of combining Chk1 inhibitors with ionizing radiation (IR) to selectively target p53-deficient cancer cells.
Materials and methods: Survival and cell cycle progression were measured in response to IR and the Chk1 inhibitors, UCN-01 and CEP-3891, in colon carcinoma HCT116 p53+/+ and p53-/- cells, and in osteosarcoma U2OS-VP16 cells with conditional expression of dominant-negative p53 (p53DD).
Results: Clonogenic survival was selectively reduced in HCT116 p53-/- compared to p53+/+ cells after treatment with UCN-01 and IR, and HCT116 p53+/+ cells also displayed strong p53-dependent G(1) arrest in the 1st cell cycle after IR. In contrast, clonogenic survival was affected similarly in U2OS-VP16 cells with and without expression of p53DD. However, death of U2OS-VP16 cells was p53 dependent as assessed by cell viability assay at 72 h, and this was associated with p53-dependent G(1) arrest in the 2nd cell cycle after treatment. Notably, HCT116 cells were overall more resistant than U2OS cells to cytotoxic effects of Chk1 inhibitors.
Conclusion: Our results suggest that p53-dependent G(1) arrest in both 1st and 2nd cell cycles may protect human cancer cells from cell death after treatment with IR and Chk1 inhibitors. However, a challenge for future clinical use will be that different cancers display different intrinsic sensitivity to such inhibitors.