Issue 3, 2014

A metabolomics investigation into the effects of HIV protease inhibitors on HPV16 E6 expressing cervical carcinoma cells

Abstract

Recently, it has been reported that anti-viral drugs, such as indinavir and lopinavir (originally targeted for HIV), also inhibit E6-mediated proteasomal degradation of mutant p53 in E6-transfected C33A cells. In order to understand more about the mode-of-action(s) of these drugs the metabolome of HPV16 E6 expressing cervical carcinoma cell lines was investigated using mass spectrometry (MS)-based metabolic profiling. The metabolite profiling of C33A parent and E6-transfected cells exposed to these two anti-viral drugs was performed by ultra performance liquid chromatography (UPLC)-MS and gas chromatography (GC)-time of flight (TOF)-MS. Using a combination of univariate and multivariate analyses, these metabolic profiles were investigated for analytical and biological reproducibility and to discover key metabolite differences elicited during anti-viral drug challenge. This approach revealed both distinct and common effects of these two drugs on the metabolome of two different cell lines. Finally, intracellular drug levels were quantified, which suggested in the case of lopinavir that increased activity of membrane transporters may contribute to the drug sensitivity of HPV infected cells.

Graphical abstract: A metabolomics investigation into the effects of HIV protease inhibitors on HPV16 E6 expressing cervical carcinoma cells

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
23 Sep 2013
Accepted
02 Jan 2014
First published
06 Jan 2014
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Mol. BioSyst., 2014,10, 398-411

A metabolomics investigation into the effects of HIV protease inhibitors on HPV16 E6 expressing cervical carcinoma cells

D. Kim, J. W. Allwood, R. E. Moore, E. Marsden-Edwards, W. B. Dunn, Y. Xu, L. Hampson, I. N. Hampson and R. Goodacre, Mol. BioSyst., 2014, 10, 398 DOI: 10.1039/C3MB70423H

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