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Intrinsic cell-penetrating activity propels Omomyc from proof of concept to viable anti-MYC therapy.

Marie-Eve BeaulieuToni JausetDaniel Massó-VallésSandra Martínez-MartínPeter RahlLoïka MaltaisMariano F Zacarias-FluckSílvia Casacuberta-SerraErika Serrano Del PozoChristopher FioreLaia ForadadaVirginia Castillo CanoMeritxell Sánchez-HervásMatthew GuentherEduardo Romero SanzMarta OteoCynthia TremblayGénesis MartínDanny LetourneauMartin MontagneMiguel Ángel Morcillo AlonsoJonathan R WhitfieldPierre LavigneLaura Soucek
Published in: Science translational medicine (2020)
Inhibiting MYC has long been considered unfeasible, although its key role in human cancers makes it a desirable target for therapeutic intervention. One reason for its perceived undruggability was the fear of catastrophic side effects in normal tissues. However, we previously designed a dominant-negative form of MYC called Omomyc and used its conditional transgenic expression to inhibit MYC function both in vitro and in vivo. MYC inhibition by Omomyc exerted a potent therapeutic impact in various mouse models of cancer, causing only mild, well-tolerated, and reversible side effects. Nevertheless, Omomyc has been so far considered only a proof of principle. In contrast with that preconceived notion, here, we show that the purified Omomyc mini-protein itself spontaneously penetrates into cancer cells and effectively interferes with MYC transcriptional activity therein. Efficacy of the Omomyc mini-protein in various experimental models of non-small cell lung cancer harboring different oncogenic mutation profiles establishes its therapeutic potential after both direct tissue delivery and systemic administration, providing evidence that the Omomyc mini-protein is an effective MYC inhibitor worthy of clinical development.
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