Pharmaceutical-grade rigosertib destabilizes microtubules in cells and in vitro, and expression of a tubulin variant with a mutation in the rigosertib-binding pocket allows cells to proliferate in the presence of rigosertib. Thus, pharmaceutical-grade rigosertib kills cancer cells by directly destabilizing microtubules, contrary to the claims by Reddy et al.
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.
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