Raymond J. Hohl, M.D., Ph.D.
Professor
M.D., Rush, 1984
Ph.D. (pharmacology), Rush, 1993
E-mail:
raymond-hohl@uiowa.edu
Office: SE313 GH
Phone: (319) 384-6279

Role of Isoprene Compounds in Cell Proliferation and Differentiation


The isoprene compounds, farnesyl pyrophosphate and geranyl pyrophosphate, are intermediates in the cholesterol biosynthetic pathway and are derived from mevalonic acid. Impairment of mevalonic acid biosynthesis by inhibition of hydroxymethylglutaryl coenzyme A (HMG CoA) reductase activity profoundly alters the proliferative and differentiation characteristics of a wide variety of normal and malignant mammalian cell types. Many intracellular proteins, such as those derived from the RAS and RAS-related oncogene families, that regulate proliferation and differentiation are covalently linked to either farnesyl pyrophosphate or geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate. For many of these proteins, isoprenylation is essential for normal regulating activities.
Our laboratory is investigating the hypothesis that depletion of isoprene compounds by HMG CoA reductase inhibition alters cell proliferation and differentiation primarily because of changes in the intracellular function of isoprenylated regulating proteins. We are also developing inhibitors of farnesyl protein transferase that mediates farnesylation of RAS and related proteins as well as other enzymes in this pathway.

Specific research projects:

1)

Studying the use of HMG CoA reductase inhibitors alone and in combination with standard chemotherapeutic agents to alter human malignant cell proliferation as well as the use of these agents to alter the differentiation of both normal human leukocytes and leukemia cells.

2)

Determining the effects of selective inhibitors of protein isoprenylation reactions on levels and functional activities of isoprenylated regulatory proteins, such as those of the RAS oncogene family.

3)

(a) Understanding differences in the clinical pharmacology of the HMG CoA reductase inhibitors in normal volunteers and in patients with malignancies, and (b) determining whether HMG CoA reductase inhibition alters the toxicology profiles of standard chemotherapeutic agents.

4)
(a) Assessing the role of membrane composition (cholesterol and saturated/polyunsaturated fatty acid content) on the membrane association of isoprenylated proteins, and (b) specific pharmacologic agents that modify both membrane content and isoprenylated protein activities are examined.

 

Representative Publications:

Dudakovic, A., Wiemer, A.J., Lamb, K.M., Vonnahme, L.A., Dietz, S., Hohl, R.J.: Inhibition of Geranylgeranyl Diphosphate Synthase Induces Apoptosis through Multiple Mechanisms and Displays Synergy with Inhibition of Other Isoprenoid Biosynthetic Enzymes. J of Pharmacol and Experi Therap 324:1028-1036, 2008.

Hamadmad, S.N., Hohl, R.J.: Erythropoietin Stimulates Cancer Cell Migration and Activates RhoA Protein through a MAPK/Erk-Dependent Mechanism. J of Pharmacol and Experi Therap 324:1227-1233, 2008.

Hamadmad, S.N., Hohl, R.J.: Lovastatin Suppresses Erythropoietin Receptor Surface Expression through Dual Inhibition of Glycosylation and Geranylgeranylation. Biochemical Pharmacology 74(14):590-600, 2007.

Click here to see a list of additional publications

Center and Program affiliations:

Holden Comprehensive Cancer Center

The Medical Scientist Training Program

Biosciences Program