Literature DB >> 32238439

Targeting NAD+ Biosynthesis Overcomes Panobinostat and Bortezomib-Induced Malignant Glioma Resistance.

Esther P Jane1,2, Daniel R Premkumar3,2,4, Swetha Thambireddy1, Brian Golbourn1, Sameer Agnihotri1,2,4, Kelsey C Bertrand5, Stephen C Mack5, Max I Myers1, Ansuman Chattopadhyay6, D Lansing Taylor7,8,9, Mark E Schurdak7,8,9, Andrew M Stern8,9, Ian F Pollack3,2,4.   

Abstract

To improve therapeutic responses in patients with glioma, new combination therapies that exploit a mechanistic understanding of the inevitable emergence of drug resistance are needed. Intratumoral heterogeneity enables a low barrier to resistance in individual patients with glioma. We reasoned that targeting two or more fundamental processes that gliomas are particularly dependent upon could result in pleiotropic effects that would reduce the diversity of resistant subpopulations allowing convergence to a more robust therapeutic strategy. In contrast to the cytostatic responses observed with each drug alone, the combination of the histone deacetylase inhibitor panobinostat and the proteasome inhibitor bortezomib synergistically induced apoptosis of adult and pediatric glioma cell lines at clinically achievable doses. Resistance that developed was examined using RNA-sequencing and pharmacologic screening of resistant versus drug-naïve cells. Quinolinic acid phosphoribosyltransferase (QPRT), the rate-determining enzyme for de novo synthesis of NAD+ from tryptophan, exhibited particularly high differential gene expression in resistant U87 cells and protein expression in all resistant lines tested. Reducing QPRT expression reversed resistance, suggesting that QPRT is a selective and targetable dependency for the panobinostat-bortezomib resistance phenotype. Pharmacologic inhibition of either NAD+ biosynthesis or processes such as DNA repair that consume NAD+ or their simultaneous inhibition with drug combinations, specifically enhanced apoptosis in treatment-resistant cells. Concomitantly, de novo vulnerabilities to known drugs were observed. IMPLICATIONS: These data provide new insights into mechanisms of treatment resistance in gliomas, hold promise for targeting recurrent disease, and provide a potential strategy for further exploration of next-generation inhibitors. ©2020 American Association for Cancer Research.

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Year:  2020        PMID: 32238439      PMCID: PMC7335346          DOI: 10.1158/1541-7786.MCR-19-0669

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Cancer Res        ISSN: 1541-7786            Impact factor:   5.852


  54 in total

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6.  Bortezomib-induced sensitization of malignant human glioma cells to vorinostat-induced apoptosis depends on reactive oxygen species production, mitochondrial dysfunction, Noxa upregulation, Mcl-1 cleavage, and DNA damage.

Authors:  Daniel R Premkumar; Esther P Jane; Naomi R Agostino; Joseph D DiDomenico; Ian F Pollack
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7.  Phase II trial of vorinostat in combination with bortezomib in recurrent glioblastoma: a north central cancer treatment group study.

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9.  Mitochondrial Bax translocation partially mediates synergistic cytotoxicity between histone deacetylase inhibitors and proteasome inhibitors in glioma cells.

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Review 5.  Advances in NAD-Lowering Agents for Cancer Treatment.

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7.  Reversing tozasertib resistance in glioma through inhibition of pyruvate dehydrogenase kinases.

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