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Inhibiting the oncogenic translation program is an effective therapeutic strategy in multiple myeloma.

Salomon ManierDaisy HuynhYu J ShenJia ZhouTimur YusufzaiKarma Z SalemRichard Y EbrightJiantao ShiJihye ParkSiobhan V GlaveyWilliam G DevineChia-Jen LiuXavier LeleuBruno QuesnelCatherine Roche-LestienneJohn K SnyderLauren E BrownNathanael GrayJames E BradnerLuke WhitesellJohn A PorcoIrene M Ghobrial
Published in: Science translational medicine (2018)
Multiple myeloma (MM) is a frequently incurable hematological cancer in which overactivity of MYC plays a central role, notably through up-regulation of ribosome biogenesis and translation. To better understand the oncogenic program driven by MYC and investigate its potential as a therapeutic target, we screened a chemically diverse small-molecule library for anti-MM activity. The most potent hits identified were rocaglate scaffold inhibitors of translation initiation. Expression profiling of MM cells revealed reversion of the oncogenic MYC-driven transcriptional program by CMLD010509, the most promising rocaglate. Proteome-wide reversion correlated with selective depletion of short-lived proteins that are key to MM growth and survival, most notably MYC, MDM2, CCND1, MAF, and MCL-1. The efficacy of CMLD010509 in mouse models of MM confirmed the therapeutic relevance of these findings in vivo and supports the feasibility of targeting the oncogenic MYC-driven translation program in MM with rocaglates.
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