Ophiobolin A kills human glioblastoma cells by inducing endoplasmic reticulum stress via disruption of thiol proteostasis

Oncotarget. 2017 Nov 20;8(63):106740-106752. doi: 10.18632/oncotarget.22537. eCollection 2017 Dec 5.

Abstract

Ophiobolin A (OP-A), a fungal sesterterpene from Bipolaris oryzae, was recently shown to have anti-glioma activity. We show here that OP-A induces paraptosis-like cell death accompanied by dilation of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) in glioma cells, and that CHOP-mediated ER stress plays a critical role in this process. OP-A-induced ER-derived dilation and cell death were found to be independent of reactive oxygen species, but were effectively blocked by various thiol antioxidants. We observed that OP-A can react with cysteinyl thiols to form Michael adducts, suggesting that the ability of OP-A to covalently modify free sulfhydryl groups on proteins may cause protein misfolding and the accumulation of misfolded proteins, leading to paraptosis-like cell death. Taken together, these results indicate that the disruption of thiol proteostasis may critically contribute to the anti-glioma activity of OP-A.

Keywords: endoplasmic reticulum stress; ophiobolin A; paraptosis-like cell death; proteostasis; thiol.