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Selective targeting of NAMPT by KPT-9274 in acute myeloid leukemia.

Shaneice R MitchellKarilyn T M LarkinNicole R GrieselhuberTzung-Huei LaiMatthew CannonShelley OrwickPratibha SharmaYerdanose AsemelashPu ZhangVirginia M GoettlLarry BeaverAlice MimsVinay K PuduvalliJames S BlachlyAmy LehmanBonnie K HarringtonSally HendersonJustin T BreitbachKatie E WilliamsShuai DongErkan BalogluWilliam SenapedisKarl N KirschnerDeepa SampathRosa LapalombellaJohn C Byrd
Published in: Blood advances (2020)
Treatment options for acute myeloid leukemia (AML) remain extremely limited and associated with significant toxicity. Nicotinamide phosphoribosyltransferase (NAMPT) is involved in the generation of NAD+ and a potential therapeutic target in AML. We evaluated the effect of KPT-9274, a p21-activated kinase 4/NAMPT inhibitor that possesses a unique NAMPT-binding profile based on in silico modeling compared with earlier compounds pursued against this target. KPT-9274 elicited loss of mitochondrial respiration and glycolysis and induced apoptosis in AML subtypes independent of mutations and genomic abnormalities. These actions occurred mainly through the depletion of NAD+, whereas genetic knockdown of p21-activated kinase 4 did not induce cytotoxicity in AML cell lines or influence the cytotoxic effect of KPT-9274. KPT-9274 exposure reduced colony formation, increased blast differentiation, and diminished the frequency of leukemia-initiating cells from primary AML samples; KPT-9274 was minimally cytotoxic toward normal hematopoietic or immune cells. In addition, KPT-9274 improved overall survival in vivo in 2 different mouse models of AML and reduced tumor development in a patient-derived xenograft model of AML. Overall, KPT-9274 exhibited broad preclinical activity across a variety of AML subtypes and warrants further investigation as a potential therapeutic agent for AML.
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