Inducing differentiation of transformed cells with hybrid polar compounds: a cell cycle-dependent process.
- 25 October 1994
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 91 (22) , 10251-10254
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.91.22.10251
Abstract
Transformed cells do not necessarily lose their capacity to differentiate. Various agents can induce many types of neoplastic cells to terminal differentiation. Among such inducers, a particularly potent group consists of hybrid polar compounds; hexamethylene bisacetamide (HMBA) is the prototype of this group. With virus-transformed murine erythroleukemia cells as a model, HMBA was shown to cause these cells to arrest in G1 phase and express globin genes. This review focuses on HMBA-induced modulation of factors regulating G1-to-S phase progression, including a decrease in the G1 cyclin-dependent kinase cdk4, associated with inhibition of phosphorylation of the retinoblastoma protein pRB and possibly other related proteins that, in turn, sequester factors required for initiation of DNA synthesis; this provides a possible mechanism for HMBA-induced terminal cell division. Evidence that hybrid polar compounds have therapeutic potential for cancer treatment will also be reviewed.Keywords
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