Anti-malariadrugs have shown promise in treating cancer, and now researchers know why
16 November 2018
Anti-malaria drugs known as chloroquines have
been repurposed to treat cancer for decades, but until now no one knew
exactly what the chloroquines were targeting when they attack a tumour.
Now, researchers from the Abramson Cancer Center of the University
of Pennsylvania (Penn) say they have identified that target — an enzyme
called PPT1 — opening up a new pathway for potential cancer treatments.
The team also used CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing to remove PPT1 from cancer
cells in the lab and found that eliminating it slows tumour growth. They
detailed a potent chloroquine developed at Penn, known as DC661, that
can take advantage of this new treatment pathway. Their findings are
published in Cancer Discovery today.
"The discovery of this target is critical because chloroquines are
currently being evaluated in clinical trials all over the world,
including here at Penn, and this knowledge fundamentally changes the way
we look at those trials," says the study's co-senior author Ravi K.
Amaravadi, MD, an associate professor of Haematology-Oncology in the
Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania. Jeffrey
D. Winkler, the Merriam Professor of Chemistry in the School of Arts and
Sciences at the University of Pennsylvania, was the other co-senior
author.
PPT1 is an enzyme which controls both the mechanistic target of
rapamycin (mTOR), a major regulator of growth in cancer cells, as well
as a process called autophagy, a built-in resistance mechanism which
allows cells to survive when under attack by breaking down unneeded
parts and recycling them to stay alive. In a previous study, Penn
researchers showed these two processes work hand-in-hand, as autophagy
provides the nutrients that allow mTOR to direct growth, while mTOR
shuts off autophagy when the nutrients aren't needed. Building off their
previous work, researchers used CRISPR/Cas9 to knockout PPT1 from
cancer cells to see if its removal had the same effect as a chloroquine.
"The edited cells look like they've been treated with a drug, and
they grow significantly slower than the unedited cells," Amaravadi said.
"We also compiled data from existing databases and found PPT1 is both
highly expressed in most cancers and also associated with poor
outcomes."
Researchers further proved the concept by targeting melanoma cells
with DC661, which specifically targets PPT1 and produces cell death in
many cell lines tested both in vitro and in vivo. It is a dimeric form
of the antimalarial drug quinacrine — meaning it has two molecules of
quinacrine bound together with a special linker.
"Our previous studies the chemistry of these compounds is crucial
to specifically targeting PPT1, and we used that knowledge to create a
potent form of the drug that we've now shown is more effective at
slowing the growth of cancer cells in mice than the monomeric
chloroquines currently under study in clinical trials," Winkler said.
The co-lead authors were Vito W. Rebecca, PhD, a postdoctoral
researcher in Amaravadi's lab at the time of the research, and Michael
C. Nicastri, PhD, who was a graduate student in Winkler's lab at the
time of the work.
Amaravadi said when you put the pieces together, it shows incredible promise.
"We now have a specific molecular target in cancer, as well as a
potent way to reach it," Amaravadi said. "It not only provides new
context for current clinical trials involving hydroxychloroquine, but
also, with further development of these compounds toward clinical drug
candidates, it opens the door for head-to-head testing of our compounds
or their optimized derivatives versus current chloroquines to see which
is more effective."
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