Targeting acute myeloid leukemia dependency on VCP-mediated DNA repair through a selective second-generation small-molecule inhibitor.
Blandine RouxCamille VaganayJesse D VargasGabriela AlexeChaima BenaksasBryann PardieuNina FenouilleJana M EllegastEdyta MalolepszaFrank LingGaetano SodaroLinda RossYana PikmanAmy Saur ConwayYangzhong TangTony WuDaniel J AndersonRonan Le MoigneHan-Jie ZhouFrédéric LucianoChristina R HartiganIlene GalinskyDaniel J DeAngeloRichard M StonePatrick AubergerMonica SchenoneSteven A CarrJosée Guirouilh-BarbatBernard S LopezMehdi KhaledKasper LageOlivier HermineMichael T HemannAlexandre PuissantKimberly StegmaierLina BenajibaPublished in: Science translational medicine (2021)
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.
Keyphrases
- acute myeloid leukemia
- dna repair
- dna damage
- allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation
- small molecule
- dna damage response
- mass spectrometry
- cell proliferation
- randomized controlled trial
- oxidative stress
- cancer therapy
- high throughput
- atrial fibrillation
- single molecule
- clinical trial
- stress induced
- liquid chromatography
- acute lymphoblastic leukemia
- cell free
- nucleic acid
- case control
- protein kinase
- pain management
- high performance liquid chromatography
- free survival
- smoking cessation
- rectal cancer
- drug induced
- endoplasmic reticulum
- heat stress
- capillary electrophoresis