| Literature DB >> 33790022 |
Blandine Roux1, Camille Vaganay1, Jesse D Vargas2, Gabriela Alexe3,4, Chaima Benaksas1, Bryann Pardieu1, Nina Fenouille1, Jana M Ellegast3,4, Edyta Malolepsza4, Frank Ling1, Gaetano Sodaro1, Linda Ross3,4, Yana Pikman3,4, Amy S Conway3,4, Yangzhong Tang2, Tony Wu2, Daniel J Anderson2, Ronan Le Moigne2, Han-Jie Zhou2, Frédéric Luciano5, Christina R Hartigan4, Ilene Galinsky6, Daniel J DeAngelo6, Richard M Stone6, Patrick Auberger7, Monica Schenone4, Steven A Carr4, Josée Guirouilh-Barbat8, Bernard Lopez8, Mehdi Khaled9, Kasper Lage4, Olivier Hermine10, Michael T Hemann11, Alexandre Puissant12, Kimberly Stegmaier13,4, Lina Benajiba12.
Abstract
The development and survival of cancer cells require adaptive mechanisms to stress. Such adaptations can confer intrinsic vulnerabilities, enabling the selective targeting of cancer cells. Through a pooled in vivo short hairpin RNA (shRNA) screen, we identified the adenosine triphosphatase associated with diverse cellular activities (AAA-ATPase) valosin-containing protein (VCP) as a top stress-related vulnerability in acute myeloid leukemia (AML). We established that AML was the most responsive disease to chemical inhibition of VCP across a panel of 16 cancer types. The sensitivity to VCP inhibition of human AML cell lines, primary patient samples, and syngeneic and xenograft mouse models of AML was validated using VCP-directed shRNAs, overexpression of a dominant-negative VCP mutant, and chemical inhibition. By combining mass spectrometry-based analysis of the VCP interactome and phospho-signaling studies, we determined that VCP is important for ataxia telangiectasia mutated (ATM) kinase activation and subsequent DNA repair through homologous recombination in AML. A second-generation VCP inhibitor, CB-5339, was then developed and characterized. Efficacy and safety of CB-5339 were validated in multiple AML models, including syngeneic and patient-derived xenograft murine models. We further demonstrated that combining DNA-damaging agents, such as anthracyclines, with CB-5339 treatment synergizes to impair leukemic growth in an MLL-AF9-driven AML murine model. These studies support the clinical testing of CB-5339 as a single agent or in combination with standard-of-care DNA-damaging chemotherapy for the treatment of AML.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33790022 PMCID: PMC8672851 DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.abg1168
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Transl Med ISSN: 1946-6234 Impact factor: 17.956