Introduction: An attractive, yet unrealized, goal in cancer therapy is repurposing psychiatric drugs that can readily penetrate the blood-brain barrier for the treatment of primary brain tumors and brain metastases. Phenothiazines (PTZs) have demonstrated anti-cancer properties through a variety of mechanisms. However, it remains unclear whether these effects are entirely separate from their activity as dopamine and serotonin receptor (DR/5-HTR) antagonists.
Methods: In this study, we evaluated the anti-cancer efficacy of a novel PTZ analog, CWHM-974, that was shown to be 100-1000-fold less potent against DR/5-HTR than its analog fluphenazine (FLU).
Results: CWHM-974 was more potent than FLU against a panel of cancer cell lines, thus clearly demonstrating that its anti-cancer effects were independent of DR/5-HTR signaling. Our results further suggested that calmodulin (CaM) binding may be necessary, but not sufficient, to explain the anti-cancer effects of CWHM-974. While both FLU and CWHM-974 induced apoptosis, they induced distinct effects on the cell cycle (G0/G1 and mitotic arrest respectively) suggesting that they may have differential effects on CaM-binding proteins involved in cell cycle regulation.
Discussion: Altogether, our findings indicated that the anti-cancer efficacy of the CWHM-974 is separable from DR/5-HTR antagonism. Thus, reducing the toxicity associated with phenothiazines related to DR/5-HTR antagonism may improve the potential to repurpose this class of drugs to treat brain tumors and/or brain metastasis.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10613967 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2023.1295185 | DOI Listing |
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