| Literature DB >> 33404912 |
Sabrina F Samuel1, Antonia Barry1, John Greenman1, Pedro Beltran-Alvarez2.
Abstract
Despite intense research efforts, our pharmaceutical repertoire against high-grade brain tumours has not been able to increase patient survival for a decade and life expectancy remains at less than 16 months after diagnosis, on average. Inhibitors of protein arginine methyltransferases (PRMTs) have been developed and investigated over the past 15 years and have now entered oncology clinical trials, including for brain tumours. This review collates recent advances in the understanding of the role of PRMTs and arginine methylation in brain tumours. We provide an up-to-date literature review on the mechanisms for PRMT regulation. These include endogenous modulators such as alternative splicing, miRNA, post-translational modifications and PRMT-protein interactions, and synthetic inhibitors. We discuss the relevance of PRMTs in brain tumours with a particular focus on PRMT1, -2, -5 and -8. Finally, we include a future perspective where we discuss possible routes for further research on arginine methylation and on the use of PRMT inhibitors in the context of brain tumours.Entities:
Keywords: Arginine methylation; Brain tumours; Glioblastoma; Inhibitors; Post-translational modifications; Protein arginine methyltransferases
Year: 2021 PMID: 33404912 PMCID: PMC8107164 DOI: 10.1007/s00726-020-02937-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Amino Acids ISSN: 0939-4451 Impact factor: 3.520
Fig. 1Scheme showing the different enzymatic activities of type I, II and III PRMTs. Type I, II and III PRMT enzymes catalyse the transfer of a methyl group from SAM to the side chain nitrogen on arginine residues on the target protein to produce monomethylarginine (MMA). Type I enzymes then catalyse the transfer of a further methyl group, asymmetrically onto the same nitrogen atom that results in asymmetric dimethylarginine (ADMA). Type II enzymes catalyse the transfer of a second methyl group symmetrically, onto the opposite nitrogen on the side chain of arginine (symmetric dimethylarginine, SDMA)
Summary of preclinical PRMT inhibitors
| PRMT | Inhibitors | Target site |
|---|---|---|
| PRMT1 | Furamidine | Competitive substrate inhibitor |
| MS023 | Type I competitive substrate inhibitor | |
| Allantodapsone | Competitive substrate inhibitor | |
| Stilbamidine | Competitive substrate inhibitor | |
| RM65 | Competitive substrate inhibitor | |
| A9 | Competitive substrate inhibitor | |
| PRMT2 | MS023 | Type I competitive substrate inhibitor |
| PRMT3 | MS023 | Type I competitive substrate inhibitor |
| PRMT4/CARM1 | MS023 | Type I competitive substrate inhibitor |
| CMPD-1 | Competitive substrate inhibitor | |
| PRMT5 | JNJ-64619178 | Small molecule inhibitor of SAM and substrate binding pockets |
| LLY-283 | SAM competitive inhibitor | |
| EPZ015866/GSK-591 | Competitive substrate inhibitor | |
| DS-437 | SAM analogue inhibitor | |
| PRMT6 | MS023 | Type I competitive substrate inhibitor |
| EPZ020411 | Competitive substrate inhibitor | |
| PRMT7 | SGC8158 | SAM competitive inhibitor |
| DS-437 | SAM analogue inhibitor | |
| PRMT8 | MS023 | Type I Competitive substrate inhibitor |
Fig. 2Schematic of the mechanisms by which ArgMe leads to oncogenesis. PRMTs and their alternatively spliced isoforms have diverse roles in transcriptional regulation, splicing and DNA damage repair, through MMA, SDMA and ADMA on specific targets. PRMTs methylate a combination of histone and non-histone targets. For example, PRMT2 methylates H3R8, inducing gene expression. PRMT1 methylates double strand break repair protein meiotic recombination 11 homolog (Mre11), anchoring it to the double strand break. PRMT5 methylates Sm ribonucleosomal proteins, promoting uridine-rich small nuclear ribonuclear protein (UsnRNPs) and survival motor neuron (SMN) spliceosomal complex assembly. Methylation of these targets results in the increased expression of oncogenic genes and the attenuation of tumour suppressive genes, either through promoter activation or repression by epigenetic regulation, alterations in splicing patterns or through an increase in genomic instability. PRMT activity has also been shown to promote tumour stem cell characteristics
Current clinical trials taking place involving PRMT inhibitors (from clinicaltrials.gov, November 2020)
| Compound name | Target PRMT | Dose escalation cohort | Expansion cohort | Trial identifier |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| GSK3368715 | Type I PRMTs except PRMT3 | Relapsed/refractory diffuse large B-cell lymphoma and selected solid tumours with frequent MTAP deficiency | Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma and relapsed/refractory solid tumours including pancreatic, bladder, and non-small cell lung cancer | NCT03666988 |
| EPZ015938 (GSK3326595) | PRMT5 | Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma and solid tumours | Triple-negative breast cancer, metastatic transitional cell carcinoma, recurrent GBM, non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma p53 mutant gene, adenoid cystic carcinoma, hormone receptor-positive adenocarcinoma of the breast, human papillomavirus positive solid tumours of any histology (including cervical cancer and squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck) and P53 wild-type non small-cell lung cancer | NCT02783300 |
| EPZ015938 (GSK3326595) | PRMT5 | Myelodysplastic syndrome and acute myeloid leukaemia | Newly diagnosed myelodysplastic syndrome | NCT03614728 |
| JNJ-64619178 | PRMT5 | Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma and solid tumours | Myelodysplastic syndromes | NCT03573310 |
| PF-06939999 | PRMT5 | Advanced solid tumours (non-small cell lung cancer, head and neck squamous cell carcinoma, oesophageal cancer, endometrial cancer, cervical cancer, and bladder cancer) | Advanced solid tumours | NCT03854227 |
| PRT811 | PRMT5 | Advanced cancers and high-grade gliomas | Advanced solid tumours and GBM | NCT04089449 |