Pharmacological Research (Mar 2022)

A small-molecule inhibitor of MDMX suppresses cervical cancer cells via the inhibition of E6-E6AP-p53 axis

  • Jingwen Zhang,
  • Guohua Yu,
  • Yanting Yang,
  • Yingjie Wang,
  • Mengqi Guo,
  • Qikun Yin,
  • Chunhong Yan,
  • Jingwei Tian,
  • Fenghua Fu,
  • Hongbo Wang

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 177
p. 106128

Abstract

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Dysfunction of p53 is observed in many malignant tumors, which is related to cancer susceptibility. In cervical cancer, p53 is primarily degradated through the complex of high-risk human papillomaviruses (HPV) oncoprotein E6 and E6-associated protein (E6AP) ubiquitin ligase. What is less clear is the mechanism and role of murine double minute X (MDMX) in cervical carcinogenesis due to the inactive status of murine double minute 2 (MDM2). In the current study, XI-011 (NSC146109), a small-molecule inhibitor of MDMX, showed robust anti-proliferation activity against several cervical cancer cell lines. XI-011 promoted apoptosis of cervical cancer cells via stabilizing p53 and activating its transcription activity. Moreover, XI-011 inhibited the growth of xenograft tumor in HeLa tumor-bearing mice, as well as enhanced the cytotoxic activity of cisplatin both in vitro and in vivo. Interestingly, MDMX co-localized with E6AP and seems to be a novel binding partner of E6AP to promote p53 ubiquitination. In conclusion, this work revealed a novel mechanism of ubiquitin-dependent p53 degredation via MDMX-E6AP axis in cervical carcinogenesis, and offered the first evidence that MDMX could be a viable drug target for the treatment of cervical cancer.

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