Limited nutrient availability in the tumor microenvironment renders pancreatic tumors sensitive to allosteric IDH1 inhibitors.
Ali Vaziri-GoharJoel CasselFarheen S MohammedMehrdad ZareiJonathan J HueOmid HajihassaniHallie J GraorYellamelli V V SrikanthSaadia A KarimAta AbbasErin PrendergastVanessa ChenErryk S KatayamaKaterina DukleskaImran KhokharAnthony AndrenLi ZhangChunying WuBernadette ErokwuChris A FlaskMahsa ZareiRui WangLuke D RothermelAndrea M P RomaniJessica BowersRobert GettsCurtis TatsuokaJennifer P MortonIlya BedermanHenri BrunengraberCostas Andreas LyssiotisJoseph M SalvinoJonathan R BrodyJordan M WinterPublished in: Nature cancer (2022)
Nutrient-deprived conditions in the tumor microenvironment (TME) restrain cancer cell viability due to increased free radicals and reduced energy production. In pancreatic cancer cells a cytosolic metabolic enzyme, wild-type isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 (wtIDH1), enables adaptation to these conditions. Under nutrient starvation, wtIDH1 oxidizes isocitrate to generate α-ketoglutarate (αKG) for anaplerosis and NADPH to support antioxidant defense. In this study, we show that allosteric inhibitors of mutant IDH1 (mIDH1) are potent wtIDH1 inhibitors under conditions present in the TME. We demonstrate that low magnesium levels facilitate allosteric inhibition of wtIDH1, which is lethal to cancer cells when nutrients are limited. Furthermore, the Food & Drug Administration (FDA)-approved mIDH1 inhibitor ivosidenib (AG-120) dramatically inhibited tumor growth in preclinical models of pancreatic cancer, highlighting this approach as a potential therapeutic strategy against wild-type IDH1 cancers.