Molecular Cell
Volume 79, Issue 1, 2 July 2020, Pages 191-198.e3
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Matters Arising Response
Pharmaceutical-Grade Rigosertib Is a Microtubule-Destabilizing Agent

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.molcel.2020.06.008Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Pharmaceutical-grade rigosertib kills cells by destabilizing microtubules

  • Pharmaceutical-grade rigosertib destabilizes microtubules in cells and in vitro

  • A rigosertib-binding mutation in tubulin alleviates rigosertib-mediated toxicity

Summary

We recently used CRISPRi/a-based chemical-genetic screens and cell biological, biochemical, and structural assays to determine that rigosertib, an anti-cancer agent in phase III clinical trials, kills cancer cells by destabilizing microtubules. Reddy and co-workers (Baker et al., 2020, this issue of Molecular Cell) suggest that a contaminating degradation product in commercial formulations of rigosertib is responsible for the microtubule-destabilizing activity. Here, we demonstrate that cells treated with pharmaceutical-grade rigosertib (>99.9% purity) or commercially obtained rigosertib have qualitatively indistinguishable phenotypes across multiple assays. The two formulations have indistinguishable chemical-genetic interactions with genes that modulate microtubule stability, both destabilize microtubules in cells and in vitro, and expression of a rationally designed tubulin mutant with a mutation in the rigosertib binding site (L240F TUBB) allows cells to proliferate in the presence of either formulation. Importantly, the specificity of the L240F TUBB mutant for microtubule-destabilizing agents has been confirmed independently. Thus, rigosertib kills cancer cells by destabilizing microtubules, in agreement with our original findings.

Keywords

CRISPRi
CRISPRa
chemical genetics
drug target identification
drug mechanism of action
rigosertib
microtubules

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