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33 result(s) for "Scobie, Martin"
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Small-molecule inhibitor of OGG1 suppresses proinflammatory gene expression and inflammation
Mice that lack the gene encoding 8-oxoguanine DNA glycosylase 1 (OGG1) show resistance to inflammation. This enzyme binds to sites of oxidative DNA damage and initiates DNA base excision repair. Visnes et al. developed a small-molecule drug that acts as a potent and selective active-site inhibitor that stops OGG1 from recognizing its DNA substrate (see the Perspective by Samson). The drug inhibited DNA repair and modified OGG1 chromatin dynamics, which resulted in the inhibition of proinflammatory pathway genes. The drug was well tolerated by mice and suppressed lipopolysaccharide- and tumor necrosis factor–α–mediated neutrophilic inflammation in the lungs. Science , this issue p. 834 ; see also p. 748 A small-molecule OGG1 glycosylase inhibitor suppresses inflammation by targeting oxidative DNA repair. The onset of inflammation is associated with reactive oxygen species and oxidative damage to macromolecules like 7,8-dihydro-8-oxoguanine (8-oxoG) in DNA. Because 8-oxoguanine DNA glycosylase 1 (OGG1) binds 8-oxoG and because Ogg1 -deficient mice are resistant to acute and systemic inflammation, we hypothesized that OGG1 inhibition may represent a strategy for the prevention and treatment of inflammation. We developed TH5487, a selective active-site inhibitor of OGG1, which hampers OGG1 binding to and repair of 8-oxoG and which is well tolerated by mice. TH5487 prevents tumor necrosis factor–α–induced OGG1-DNA interactions at guanine-rich promoters of proinflammatory genes. This, in turn, decreases DNA occupancy of nuclear factor κB and proinflammatory gene expression, resulting in decreased immune cell recruitment to mouse lungs. Thus, we present a proof of concept that targeting oxidative DNA repair can alleviate inflammatory conditions in vivo.
Author Correction: Targeted NUDT5 inhibitors block hormone signaling in breast cancer cells
An amendment to this paper has been published and can be accessed via a link at the top of the paper.An amendment to this paper has been published and can be accessed via a link at the top of the paper.
MTH1 inhibition eradicates cancer by preventing sanitation of the dNTP pool
Cancers have dysfunctional redox regulation resulting in reactive oxygen species production, damaging both DNA and free dNTPs. The MTH1 protein sanitizes oxidized dNTP pools to prevent incorporation of damaged bases during DNA replication. Although MTH1 is non-essential in normal cells, we show that cancer cells require MTH1 activity to avoid incorporation of oxidized dNTPs, resulting in DNA damage and cell death. We validate MTH1 as an anticancer target in vivo and describe small molecules TH287 and TH588 as first-in-class nudix hydrolase family inhibitors that potently and selectively engage and inhibit the MTH1 protein in cells. Protein co-crystal structures demonstrate that the inhibitors bind in the active site of MTH1. The inhibitors cause incorporation of oxidized dNTPs in cancer cells, leading to DNA damage, cytotoxicity and therapeutic responses in patient-derived mouse xenografts. This study exemplifies the non-oncogene addiction concept for anticancer treatment and validates MTH1 as being cancer phenotypic lethal. In order to find a general treatment for cancer, this study found that MTH1 activity is essential for the survival of transformed cells, and isolated two small-molecule inhibitors of MTH1, TH287 and TH588 — in the presence of these inhibitors, damaged nucleotides are incorporated into DNA only in cancer cells, causing cytotoxicity and eliciting a beneficial response in patient-derived mouse xenograft models. MTH1 is Ras-linked target for cancer therapy Mutations in the Ras oncogene are associated with poor prognosis. It was known that overexpression of MTH1, a protein involved in preventing the incorporation of damaged bases into DNA, prevents Ras-induced senescence. In seeking to understand how damaged deoxynucleotides (dNTPs) promote cancer, Thomas Helleday and colleagues found that MTH1 activity is essential for the survival of transformed cells, and isolated two small-molecule MTH1 inhibitors, TH287 and TH588. In the presence of these hydrolase inhibitors, damaged nucleotides are incorporated into DNA only in cancer cells, causing cytotoxicity and eliciting a beneficial response in mouse xenograft cancer models. In a second study, Giulio Superti-Furga and colleagues sought to identify the target of a small molecule, SCH51344, that had been developed for use against Ras -dependent cancers and found that it inactivates MTH1. This allowed them to identify a new potent inhibitor of MTH1 that is enantiomer-selective, ( S )-crizotinib. In the presence of this drug, tumour growth is suppressed in animal models of colon cancer.
Rational design and validation of a Tip60 histone acetyltransferase inhibitor
Histone acetylation is required for many aspects of gene regulation, genome maintenance and metabolism and dysfunctional acetylation is implicated in numerous diseases, including cancer. Acetylation is regulated by histone acetyltransferases (HATs) and histone deacetylases and currently, few general HAT inhibitors have been described. We identified the HAT Tip60 as an excellent candidate for targeted drug development, as Tip60 is a key mediator of the DNA damage response and transcriptional co-activator. Our modeling of Tip60 indicated that the active binding pocket possesses opposite charges at each end, with the positive charges attributed to two specific side chains. We used structure based drug design to develop a novel Tip60 inhibitor, TH1834, to fit this specific pocket. We demonstrate that TH1834 significantly inhibits Tip60 activity in vitro and treating cells with TH1834 results in apoptosis and increased unrepaired DNA damage (following ionizing radiation treatment) in breast cancer but not control cell lines. Furthermore, TH1834 did not affect the activity of related HAT MOF, as indicated by H4K16Ac, demonstrating specificity. The modeling and validation of the small molecule inhibitor TH1834 represents a first step towards developing additional specific, targeted inhibitors of Tip60 that may lead to further improvements in the treatment of breast cancer.
Topical MTH1 Inhibition Suppresses SKP2-WNT5a-Driven Psoriatic Hyperproliferation
Topically applied TH1579 alleviated the psoriatic phenotype in the imiquimod-induced psoriasis mouse model by decreasing CD45+, Ly6b+, and CD3+ cell infiltration and downregulating the expression of the proliferation marker PCNA. Moreover, TH1579 strongly suppressed IL-17 expression in mouse skin, accompanied by reduced infiltration of IL-17-producing γδ-T cells. Furthermore, TH1579 decreased keratinocyte viability and proliferation. Mass spectrometry data analysis revealed the enrichment of proteins associated with nucleotide excision repair and cell cycle regulation. The key cell cycle regulatory protein F-box protein S-phase kinase-associated protein 2 (SKP2) was significantly downregulated, along with the psoriasis-associated proliferation marker WNT5a, identified as a SKP2 downstream target. The downregulation of SKP2 and WNT5a was confirmed in MTH1i-treated mouse skin. Our findings support the topical administration of MTH1i TH1579 as a psoriasis treatment. The therapeutic effects depended on the SKP2/WNT5a pathway, which mediates psoriatic hyperproliferation. This study introduces a conceptually innovative topical treatment for psoriasis patients with mild-to-moderate disease who have limited therapeutic options.
A patient-derived xenograft pre-clinical trial reveals treatment responses and a resistance mechanism to karonudib in metastatic melanoma
Karonudib (TH1579) is a novel compound that exerts anti-tumor activities and has recently entered phase I clinical testing. The aim of this study was to conduct a pre-clinical trial in patient-derived xenografts to identify the possible biomarkers of response or resistance that could guide inclusion of patients suffering from metastatic melanoma in phase II clinical trials. Patient-derived xenografts from 31 melanoma patients with metastatic disease were treated with karonudib or a vehicle for 18 days. Treatment responses were followed by measuring tumor sizes, and the models were categorized in the response groups. Tumors were harvested and processed for RNA sequencing and protein analysis. To investigate the effect of karonudib on T-cell-mediated anti-tumor activities, tumor-infiltrating T cells were injected in mice carrying autologous tumors and the mice treated with karonudib. We show that karonudib has heterogeneous anti-tumor effect on metastatic melanoma. Thus, based on the treatment responses, we could divide the 31 patient-derived xenografts in three treatment groups: progression group (32%), suppression group (42%), and regression group (26%). Furthermore, we show that karonudib has anti-tumor effect, irrespective of major melanoma driver mutations. Also, we identify high expression of ABCB1 , which codes for p-gp pumps as a resistance biomarker. Finally, we show that karonudib treatment does not hamper T-cell-mediated anti-tumor responses. These findings can be used to guide future use of karonudib in clinical use with a potential approach as precision medicine.
Targeted NUDT5 inhibitors block hormone signaling in breast cancer cells
With a diverse network of substrates, NUDIX hydrolases have emerged as a key family of nucleotide-metabolizing enzymes. NUDT5 (also called NUDIX5) has been implicated in ADP-ribose and 8-oxo-guanine metabolism and was recently identified as a rheostat of hormone-dependent gene regulation and proliferation in breast cancer cells. Here, we further elucidate the physiological relevance of known NUDT5 substrates and underscore the biological requirement for NUDT5 in gene regulation and proliferation of breast cancer cells. We confirm the involvement of NUDT5 in ADP-ribose metabolism and dissociate a relationship to oxidized nucleotide sanitation. Furthermore, we identify potent NUDT5 inhibitors, which are optimized to promote maximal NUDT5 cellular target engagement by CETSA. Lead compound, TH5427, blocks progestin-dependent, PAR-derived nuclear ATP synthesis and subsequent chromatin remodeling, gene regulation and proliferation in breast cancer cells. We herein present TH5427 as a promising, targeted inhibitor that can be used to further study NUDT5 activity and ADP-ribose metabolism. NUDIX hydrolases are an important family of nucleotide-metabolizing enzymes. Here, the authors identify potent, small molecule inhibitors of NUDT5, which is implicated in ADP-ribose and 8-oxo-guanine metabolism, and confirm its role in gene regulation and proliferation in breast cancer cells.
Virtual fragment screening for DNA repair inhibitors in vast chemical space
Fragment-based screening can catalyze drug discovery by identifying novel scaffolds, but this approach is limited by the small chemical libraries studied by biophysical experiments and the challenging optimization process. To expand the explored chemical space, we employ structure-based docking to evaluate orders-of-magnitude larger libraries than those used in traditional fragment screening. We computationally dock a set of 14 million fragments to 8-oxoguanine DNA glycosylase (OGG1), a difficult drug target involved in cancer and inflammation, and evaluate 29 highly ranked compounds experimentally. Four of these bind to OGG1 and X-ray crystallography confirms the binding modes predicted by docking. Furthermore, we show how fragment elaboration using searches among billions of readily synthesizable compounds identifies submicromolar inhibitors with anti-inflammatory and anti-cancer effects in cells. Comparisons of virtual screening strategies to explore a chemical space of 10 22 compounds illustrate that fragment-based design enables enumeration of all molecules relevant for inhibitor discovery. Virtual fragment screening is hence a highly efficient strategy for navigating the rapidly growing combinatorial libraries and can serve as a powerful tool to accelerate drug discovery efforts for challenging therapeutic targets. Fragment-based drug design is an efficient yet challenging approach for developing therapeutics. Here, the authors employ structure-based docking screens of vast fragment libraries to identify inhibitors of 8-oxoguanine DNA glycosylase, a difficult drug target implicated in cancer and inflammation.
Pharmacological targeting of MTHFD2 suppresses acute myeloid leukemia by inducing thymidine depletion and replication stress
The folate metabolism enzyme MTHFD2 (methylenetetrahydrofolate dehydrogenase/cyclohydrolase) is consistently overexpressed in cancer but its roles are not fully characterized, and current candidate inhibitors have limited potency for clinical development. In the present study, we demonstrate a role for MTHFD2 in DNA replication and genomic stability in cancer cells, and perform a drug screen to identify potent and selective nanomolar MTHFD2 inhibitors; protein cocrystal structures demonstrated binding to the active site of MTHFD2 and target engagement. MTHFD2 inhibitors reduced replication fork speed and induced replication stress followed by S-phase arrest and apoptosis of acute myeloid leukemia cells in vitro and in vivo, with a therapeutic window spanning four orders of magnitude compared with nontumorigenic cells. Mechanistically, MTHFD2 inhibitors prevented thymidine production leading to misincorporation of uracil into DNA and replication stress. Overall, these results demonstrate a functional link between MTHFD2-dependent cancer metabolism and replication stress that can be exploited therapeutically with this new class of inhibitors.
Development of a chemical probe against NUDT15
The NUDIX hydrolase NUDT15 was originally implicated in sanitizing oxidized nucleotides, but was later shown to hydrolyze the active thiopurine metabolites, 6-thio-(d)GTP, thereby dictating the clinical response of this standard-of-care treatment for leukemia and inflammatory diseases. Nonetheless, its physiological roles remain elusive. Here, we sought to develop small-molecule NUDT15 inhibitors to elucidate its biological functions and potentially to improve NUDT15-dependent chemotherapeutics. Lead compound TH1760 demonstrated low-nanomolar biochemical potency through direct and specific binding into the NUDT15 catalytic pocket and engaged cellular NUDT15 in the low-micromolar range. We also employed thiopurine potentiation as a proxy functional readout and demonstrated that TH1760 sensitized cells to 6-thioguanine through enhanced accumulation of 6-thio-(d)GTP in nucleic acids. A biochemically validated, inactive structural analog, TH7285, confirmed that increased thiopurine toxicity takes place via direct NUDT15 inhibition. In conclusion, TH1760 represents the first chemical probe for interrogating NUDT15 biology and potential therapeutic avenues. TH1760 is a first-in-class, potent, selective and cell-active inhibitor against human NUDT15, which sensitizes cells to 6-thioguanine treatment. TH1760 represents a valuable tool for deciphering the enigmatic functions of NUDT15.