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Metarrestin, a perinucleolar compartment inhibitor, effectively suppresses metastasis.

Kevin J FrankowskiChen WangSamarjit PatnaikFrank J SchoenenNoel T SouthallDandan LiYaroslav TeperWei SunIrawati KandelaDeqing HuChristopher DextrasZachary KnottsYansong BianJohn NortonSteve TitusMarzena A LewandowskaYiping WenKatherine I FarleyLesley Mathews GrinerJamey SultanZhaojing MengMing ZhouTomas VilimasAstin S PowersSerguei KozlovKunio NagashimaHumair S QuadriMin FangCharles LongOjus KhanolkarWarren ChenJinsol KangHelen HuangEric ChowEsthermanya GoldbergCoral FeldmanRomi XiHye Rim KimGary SahagianSusan J BasergaAndrew MazarMarc FerrerWei ZhengAli ShilatifardJeffrey AubeRushikesh SableJuan Jose MaruganSui Huang
Published in: Science translational medicine (2019)
Metastasis remains a leading cause of cancer mortality due to the lack of specific inhibitors against this complex process. To identify compounds selectively targeting the metastatic state, we used the perinucleolar compartment (PNC), a complex nuclear structure associated with metastatic behaviors of cancer cells, as a phenotypic marker for a high-content screen of over 140,000 structurally diverse compounds. Metarrestin, obtained through optimization of a screening hit, disassembles PNCs in multiple cancer cell lines, inhibits invasion in vitro, suppresses metastatic development in three mouse models of human cancer, and extends survival of mice in a metastatic pancreatic cancer xenograft model with no organ toxicity or discernable adverse effects. Metarrestin disrupts the nucleolar structure and inhibits RNA polymerase (Pol) I transcription, at least in part by interacting with the translation elongation factor eEF1A2. Thus, metarrestin represents a potential therapeutic approach for the treatment of metastatic cancer.
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