Contiguous Four‐guanosine Sequence in c‐myc Antisense Phosphorothioate Oligonucleotides Inhibits Cell Growth on Human Lung Cancer Cells: Possible Involvement of Cell Adhesion Inhibition
1997
A contiguous four-guanosine (4G) sequence in c-myc antisense phosphorothioate oligonucleotides caused an antiproliferative effect in smooth muscle cells. To investigate the antiproliferative effect of c-myc antisense oligonucleotides on human lung cancer cell lines, we synthesized oligonucleotides of various lengths and sequences, focusing on the contiguous four-guanosine (4G) sequence. While a c-myc antisense oligonucleotide (20AS1 (4G)) targeted to the translation initiation codon of c-myc mRNA inhibited cell growth of A549 cells by 69% at 10 μM, a scrambled oligonucleotide (20SCR1 (4G)) containing the contiguous four-guanosine (4G) sequence also inhibited cell growth by 72% at the same dose. Although treatment with either 20AS1 (4G) or 20SCR1 (4G) inhibited cell adhesion by 70% at 10 μM, expression of c-myc protein was significantly suppressed only by 20AS1 (4G) (62%), and was only weakly inhibited by 20SCR1 (4G) (32%). Furthermore, a small cell lung carcinoma cell line, Lu65, which can grow in suspension form, was highly resistant to 20AS1 (4G) treatment (IC 50 > 20 μM). These results suggest that the cell growth inhibition by c-myc antisense oligonucleotides containing the contiguous four-guanosine (4G) sequence was possibly correlated with inhibition of cell adhesion, but not with inhibition of c-myc protein expression, via a sequence-specific non-antisense mechanism.
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