30 results on '"Minying Pu"'
Search Results
2. Table S3 from Tumor Intrinsic Efficacy by SHP2 and RTK Inhibitors in KRAS-Mutant Cancers
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Morvarid Mohseni, Silvia Goldoni, Jeffrey A. Engelman, Juliet Williams, Peter S. Hammerman, Tinya J. Abrams, Darrin D. Stuart, Giordano Caponigro, Serena J. Silver, Susan Moody, Matthew J. LaMarche, Ali Farsidjani, LeighAnn Alexander, Michael Fleming, Joanne Lim, Minying Pu, Matthew J. Meyer, Matthew Shirley, Bhavesh Pant, Hengyu Lu, Roberto Velazquez, Steven Kovats, Chen Liu, Hongyun Wang, and Huai-Xiang Hao
- Abstract
Supplementary Table 3: A total of 246 cell lines were evaluated for both SHP2 knockdown and SHP099 sensitivity. Data displays PTPN11 shRNA ATARIS Quantile Score and SHP099 IC50 and Amax for each cell line tested.
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- 2023
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3. Figure S2 from Tumor Intrinsic Efficacy by SHP2 and RTK Inhibitors in KRAS-Mutant Cancers
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Morvarid Mohseni, Silvia Goldoni, Jeffrey A. Engelman, Juliet Williams, Peter S. Hammerman, Tinya J. Abrams, Darrin D. Stuart, Giordano Caponigro, Serena J. Silver, Susan Moody, Matthew J. LaMarche, Ali Farsidjani, LeighAnn Alexander, Michael Fleming, Joanne Lim, Minying Pu, Matthew J. Meyer, Matthew Shirley, Bhavesh Pant, Hengyu Lu, Roberto Velazquez, Steven Kovats, Chen Liu, Hongyun Wang, and Huai-Xiang Hao
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In vivo efficacy of SHP099 (100 mg/kg, daily) in the KYSE-520 esophageal cancer cell line model. Data are plotted as the treatment mean {plus minus} s.e.m (n=7) ( (B-I) In vivo efficacy data for cell line models represented in Fig. 3E. SHP099 and trametinib were orally administered at the doses, schedules and for the duration indicated. Data are plotted as the treatment mean {plus minus} s.e.m.
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- 2023
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4. Figure S4 from Tumor Intrinsic Efficacy by SHP2 and RTK Inhibitors in KRAS-Mutant Cancers
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Morvarid Mohseni, Silvia Goldoni, Jeffrey A. Engelman, Juliet Williams, Peter S. Hammerman, Tinya J. Abrams, Darrin D. Stuart, Giordano Caponigro, Serena J. Silver, Susan Moody, Matthew J. LaMarche, Ali Farsidjani, LeighAnn Alexander, Michael Fleming, Joanne Lim, Minying Pu, Matthew J. Meyer, Matthew Shirley, Bhavesh Pant, Hengyu Lu, Roberto Velazquez, Steven Kovats, Chen Liu, Hongyun Wang, and Huai-Xiang Hao
- Abstract
(A) Immunoblot of p-RSK3 and qPCR for DUSP6 from MIA PaCa-2 xenografts collected 3 hours after the last dose from Fig 5C. (B) Immunoblot for the designated proteins from MIA PaCa-2 cells grown in 2D, 3D and from in vivo xenografts without compound treatment. Protein loading amount was normalized and verified by tubulin loading control. Each separate column represents an individual treated tumor. (C) Dependency of MET by DRIVE pooled shRNA screen (y axis, ATARIS Quantile score of less than -0.5 indicates a significant effect) and expression of HGF (x-axis) by RNAseq in pancreatic cancer cell lines in CCLE (n=21). (D) Immunoblot of p-RSK3 and qPCR for DUSP6 from KP4 xenografts collected 3 hours after the last dose from Fig 5E. Protein loading amount was normalized and verified by tubulin loading control. Each separate column represents an individual treated tumor (E) Immunoblot for the designated proteins from KP4 cells grown in 2D, 3D and from in vivo xenografts without compound treatment (F) Schematic of RTK-SHP2 signaling highlighting that SHP2 acts downstream of one or more activated RTKs to elicit downstream signaling in KRAS mutant and also additional SHP2-specific, non-MAPK signaling. SHP2 inhibition by SHP099 can serve as a surrogate for cancers where KRAS mutant cancers are dependent on upstream RTKs.
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- 2023
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5. Table S1 from Tumor Intrinsic Efficacy by SHP2 and RTK Inhibitors in KRAS-Mutant Cancers
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Morvarid Mohseni, Silvia Goldoni, Jeffrey A. Engelman, Juliet Williams, Peter S. Hammerman, Tinya J. Abrams, Darrin D. Stuart, Giordano Caponigro, Serena J. Silver, Susan Moody, Matthew J. LaMarche, Ali Farsidjani, LeighAnn Alexander, Michael Fleming, Joanne Lim, Minying Pu, Matthew J. Meyer, Matthew Shirley, Bhavesh Pant, Hengyu Lu, Roberto Velazquez, Steven Kovats, Chen Liu, Hongyun Wang, and Huai-Xiang Hao
- Abstract
Supplementary Table 1: List of all cell lines in the CCLE (Cancer Cell Line Encyclopedia) where sensitivity to SHP2 (PTPN11) knockdown was evaluated in 2D. Lineage, and genetic status of KRAS and BRAF are shown. Blank cells represent cell line data where genetic or sensitivity data do not exist. Values depicted are the ATARIS quantile normalized z-score. Additional details on the methodology of the screen are published (58).
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- 2023
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6. Fig S1 from Tumor Intrinsic Efficacy by SHP2 and RTK Inhibitors in KRAS-Mutant Cancers
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Morvarid Mohseni, Silvia Goldoni, Jeffrey A. Engelman, Juliet Williams, Peter S. Hammerman, Tinya J. Abrams, Darrin D. Stuart, Giordano Caponigro, Serena J. Silver, Susan Moody, Matthew J. LaMarche, Ali Farsidjani, LeighAnn Alexander, Michael Fleming, Joanne Lim, Minying Pu, Matthew J. Meyer, Matthew Shirley, Bhavesh Pant, Hengyu Lu, Roberto Velazquez, Steven Kovats, Chen Liu, Hongyun Wang, and Huai-Xiang Hao
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(A) Effects of SHP099 and erlotinib on proliferation of EGFR-dependent and RAS/RAF wildtype Detroit-562 and KYSE520 cells grown in 2D monolayer or 3D spheroids (with 20% matrigel) for 6 days. The colored dotted lines at the bottom of graphs are the percentage of Day 0 reading of DMSO-treated cells normalized to that of Day 6 in 2D and 3D, respectively. The black hyphenated lines visualize IC50 values. Error bars denote standard error of the mean. (B-C) Immunoblot of indicated proteins in T3M-4 cells treated with DMSO, SHP099 (10 µM), or trametinib (10 nM) for 2 hours in 2D and 3D culture, respectively. Tubulin serves as a protein loading control. (D) Heatmap depicts Log2 fold change of genes differentially regulated in 2D and 3D following 19 hours after treatment with SHP099. Duplicate samples were analyzed and are depicted. GO ontology was performed using DAVID (42,43) derived from genes with 2-fold change relative to DMSO control.
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- 2023
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7. Supplementary Material and Methods from Tumor Intrinsic Efficacy by SHP2 and RTK Inhibitors in KRAS-Mutant Cancers
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Morvarid Mohseni, Silvia Goldoni, Jeffrey A. Engelman, Juliet Williams, Peter S. Hammerman, Tinya J. Abrams, Darrin D. Stuart, Giordano Caponigro, Serena J. Silver, Susan Moody, Matthew J. LaMarche, Ali Farsidjani, LeighAnn Alexander, Michael Fleming, Joanne Lim, Minying Pu, Matthew J. Meyer, Matthew Shirley, Bhavesh Pant, Hengyu Lu, Roberto Velazquez, Steven Kovats, Chen Liu, Hongyun Wang, and Huai-Xiang Hao
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Supplementary Material and Methods. File contains the following: Transcriptome sequencing and analysis, Soft agar assay, 2D and 3D Cell proliferation screen and compound characterization information.
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- 2023
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8. Figure S3 from Tumor Intrinsic Efficacy by SHP2 and RTK Inhibitors in KRAS-Mutant Cancers
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Morvarid Mohseni, Silvia Goldoni, Jeffrey A. Engelman, Juliet Williams, Peter S. Hammerman, Tinya J. Abrams, Darrin D. Stuart, Giordano Caponigro, Serena J. Silver, Susan Moody, Matthew J. LaMarche, Ali Farsidjani, LeighAnn Alexander, Michael Fleming, Joanne Lim, Minying Pu, Matthew J. Meyer, Matthew Shirley, Bhavesh Pant, Hengyu Lu, Roberto Velazquez, Steven Kovats, Chen Liu, Hongyun Wang, and Huai-Xiang Hao
- Abstract
(A) In vivo primary human colorectal xenograft model HCOX4087 treated with trametinib (0.3 mg/kg QD), SHP099 (100 mg/kg QD), and a pan-RTK inhibitor, Dovitinib (100 mg/kg QD). (B-C) In vivo efficacy of selective VEGFR2 inhibitor, BFH772 (3 mg/kg QD) in MIA PaCA-2 and T3M-4 cells implanted subcutaneously. Data plotted are tumor volume means {plus minus} s.e.m (T3M-4, n=8. MIA PaCA-2, n=7) (D) Evaluation of SHP099 in firefly- luciferase labeled MIA PaCa-2 pancreatic cells implanted surgically into the mouse pancreas. Data plotted are mean bioluminescent signal (BLI) {plus minus} s.e.m (n=6). (E-F) Immunoblot of SHP2 and soft agar assay with MIA Paca-2 cells with Dox-inducible shRNA targeting SHP2 or control non-targeting shRNA after Dox treatment. (G) In vivo SHP2 expression levels evaluated by Western blot and levels of MAPK pathway suppression by DUSP6, 3 hours after the last dose of SHP099 from MIA PaCa-2 tumors in Fig. 4F (n=3).
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- 2023
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9. Table S2 from Tumor Intrinsic Efficacy by SHP2 and RTK Inhibitors in KRAS-Mutant Cancers
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Morvarid Mohseni, Silvia Goldoni, Jeffrey A. Engelman, Juliet Williams, Peter S. Hammerman, Tinya J. Abrams, Darrin D. Stuart, Giordano Caponigro, Serena J. Silver, Susan Moody, Matthew J. LaMarche, Ali Farsidjani, LeighAnn Alexander, Michael Fleming, Joanne Lim, Minying Pu, Matthew J. Meyer, Matthew Shirley, Bhavesh Pant, Hengyu Lu, Roberto Velazquez, Steven Kovats, Chen Liu, Hongyun Wang, and Huai-Xiang Hao
- Abstract
Supplementary Table 2: List of all cell lines in the CCLE where sensitivity to SHP099 was evaluated in 2D. Lineage and genetic status of KRAS and BRAF are shown. Blank cells represent cell line data where genetic or screening data do not exist. Data depicted in Figure 1B are IC50 values. This table includes all sensitivity data based on both IC50 and Amax data.
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- 2023
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10. Supplementary Figures 1 - 6 from IDH1 Mutations Alter Citric Acid Cycle Metabolism and Increase Dependence on Oxidative Mitochondrial Metabolism
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Christian M. Metallo, Raymond Pagliarini, Anne N. Murphy, Matthew G. Vander Heiden, Joseph D. Growney, Christopher Straub, Erika D. Handly, Hong Yin, Franklin Chung, Carol Joud-Caldwell, Chad Vickers, Fallon Lin, Minying Pu, Kelly L. Slocum, Xiamei Zhang, Courtney R. Green, Ajit S. Divakaruni, Shawn M. Davidson, Seth J. Parker, and Alexandra R. Grassian
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PDF file - 348KB, Figure S1: Isogenic IDH1 mutation compromises metabolic reprogramming under hypoxia. Figure S2: Simulated and measured uncorrected MIDs. Figure S3: Compromised Reductive TCA Metabolism is specific to cells with mutant IDH1. Figure S4: Cells with endogenous IDH1 and IDH2 mutations respond differently to mitochondrial stress. Figure S5: Inhibition of mutant IDH1 does not rescue reprogramming of TCA metabolism. Figure S6: Cells expressing mutant IDH1 are sensitive to pharmacological inhibition of mitochondrial oxidative metabolism.
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- 2023
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11. Supplementary Tables 1 - 4 from IDH1 Mutations Alter Citric Acid Cycle Metabolism and Increase Dependence on Oxidative Mitochondrial Metabolism
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Christian M. Metallo, Raymond Pagliarini, Anne N. Murphy, Matthew G. Vander Heiden, Joseph D. Growney, Christopher Straub, Erika D. Handly, Hong Yin, Franklin Chung, Carol Joud-Caldwell, Chad Vickers, Fallon Lin, Minying Pu, Kelly L. Slocum, Xiamei Zhang, Courtney R. Green, Ajit S. Divakaruni, Shawn M. Davidson, Seth J. Parker, and Alexandra R. Grassian
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PDF file - 93KB, Estimates Fluxes for HCT116 Parental and IDH1 R132H/+ 2H1 cells under Normoxia and Hypoxia (2 percent Oxygen).
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- 2023
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12. Supplementary Methods, Figure Legends from IDH1 Mutations Alter Citric Acid Cycle Metabolism and Increase Dependence on Oxidative Mitochondrial Metabolism
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Christian M. Metallo, Raymond Pagliarini, Anne N. Murphy, Matthew G. Vander Heiden, Joseph D. Growney, Christopher Straub, Erika D. Handly, Hong Yin, Franklin Chung, Carol Joud-Caldwell, Chad Vickers, Fallon Lin, Minying Pu, Kelly L. Slocum, Xiamei Zhang, Courtney R. Green, Ajit S. Divakaruni, Shawn M. Davidson, Seth J. Parker, and Alexandra R. Grassian
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PDF file - 136KB
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- 2023
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13. Data from IDH1 Mutations Alter Citric Acid Cycle Metabolism and Increase Dependence on Oxidative Mitochondrial Metabolism
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Christian M. Metallo, Raymond Pagliarini, Anne N. Murphy, Matthew G. Vander Heiden, Joseph D. Growney, Christopher Straub, Erika D. Handly, Hong Yin, Franklin Chung, Carol Joud-Caldwell, Chad Vickers, Fallon Lin, Minying Pu, Kelly L. Slocum, Xiamei Zhang, Courtney R. Green, Ajit S. Divakaruni, Shawn M. Davidson, Seth J. Parker, and Alexandra R. Grassian
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Oncogenic mutations in isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 and 2 (IDH1/2) occur in several types of cancer, but the metabolic consequences of these genetic changes are not fully understood. In this study, we performed 13C metabolic flux analysis on a panel of isogenic cell lines containing heterozygous IDH1/2 mutations. We observed that under hypoxic conditions, IDH1-mutant cells exhibited increased oxidative tricarboxylic acid metabolism along with decreased reductive glutamine metabolism, but not IDH2-mutant cells. However, selective inhibition of mutant IDH1 enzyme function could not reverse the defect in reductive carboxylation activity. Furthermore, this metabolic reprogramming increased the sensitivity of IDH1-mutant cells to hypoxia or electron transport chain inhibition in vitro. Lastly, IDH1-mutant cells also grew poorly as subcutaneous xenografts within a hypoxic in vivo microenvironment. Together, our results suggest therapeutic opportunities to exploit the metabolic vulnerabilities specific to IDH1 mutation. Cancer Res; 74(12); 3317–31. ©2014 AACR.
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- 2023
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14. Tumor Intrinsic Efficacy by SHP2 and RTK Inhibitors in KRAS-Mutant Cancers
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Hengyu Lu, Matthew J. LaMarche, Bhavesh Pant, Chen Liu, Joanne Lim, Hongyun Wang, Morvarid Mohseni, Silvia Goldoni, Matthew D. Shirley, Steven Kovats, Juliet Williams, Jeffrey A. Engelman, Minying Pu, Leigh Ann Alexander, Peter S. Hammerman, Michael Fleming, Darrin Stuart, Tinya Abrams, Ali Farsidjani, Matthew J. Meyer, Susan Moody, Huai Xiang Hao, Serena J. Silver, Giordano Caponigro, and Roberto Velazquez
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0301 basic medicine ,MAPK/ERK pathway ,Cancer Research ,Protein Tyrosine Phosphatase, Non-Receptor Type 11 ,medicine.disease_cause ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins p21(ras) ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,In vivo ,Cell Line, Tumor ,Neoplasms ,Tachykinins ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Tumor microenvironment ,Oncogene ,Chemistry ,Cancer ,medicine.disease ,Xenograft Model Antitumor Assays ,Disease Models, Animal ,030104 developmental biology ,Oncology ,Cell culture ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Cancer cell ,Cancer research ,Female ,KRAS ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
KRAS, an oncogene mutated in nearly one third of human cancers, remains a pharmacologic challenge for direct inhibition except for recent advances in selective inhibitors targeting the G12C variant. Here, we report that selective inhibition of the protein tyrosine phosphatase, SHP2, can impair the proliferation of KRAS-mutant cancer cells in vitro and in vivo using cell line xenografts and primary human tumors. In vitro, sensitivity of KRAS-mutant cells toward the allosteric SHP2 inhibitor, SHP099, is not apparent when cells are grown on plastic in 2D monolayer, but is revealed when cells are grown as 3D multicellular spheroids. This antitumor activity is also observed in vivo in mouse models. Interrogation of the MAPK pathway in SHP099-treated KRAS-mutant cancer models demonstrated similar modulation of p-ERK and DUSP6 transcripts in 2D, 3D, and in vivo, suggesting a MAPK pathway–dependent mechanism and possible non-MAPK pathway–dependent mechanisms in tumor cells or tumor microenvironment for the in vivo efficacy. For the KRASG12C MIAPaCa-2 model, we demonstrate that the efficacy is cancer cell intrinsic as there is minimal antiangiogenic activity by SHP099, and the effects of SHP099 is recapitulated by genetic depletion of SHP2 in cancer cells. Furthermore, we demonstrate that SHP099 efficacy in KRAS-mutant models can be recapitulated with RTK inhibitors, suggesting RTK activity is responsible for the SHP2 activation. Taken together, these data reveal that many KRAS-mutant cancers depend on upstream signaling from RTK and SHP2, and provide a new therapeutic framework for treating KRAS-mutant cancers with SHP2 inhibitors.
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- 2019
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15. Identification of TNO155, an Allosteric SHP2 Inhibitor for the Treatment of Cancer
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Kelly Slocum, Jianmei Fan, Michael Dore, Palermo Mark G, Zhan Deng, Bakary-Barry Toure, Jorge Garcia-Fortanet, Dyuti Majumdar, Martin F. Hentemann, Nick Keen, Suzanne Zhu, Christopher Towler, Michael Shultz, William R. Sellers, Simon Mathieu, Denise Grunenfelder, Robert Koenig, Douglas C. Bauer, Shumei Liu, Jay Larrow, Victoriano Tamez, David Dunstan, Andreea Argintaru, Timothy Michael Ramsey, Zhouliang Chen, Gang Liu, Ying-Nan Chen, Rukundo Ntaganda, Bing Yu, Joanna Slisz, Hongyun Wang, Pascal D. Fortin, Christopher Sean Straub, Ji-Hu Zhang, Ping Wang, Laura R. LaBonte, Mitsunori Kato, Matthew J. Meyer, Fan Yang, Patrick James Sarver, Samuel B. Ho, Brant Firestone, Rajesh Karki, John F. Reilly, Troy Smith, Ho Man Chan, Cary Fridrich, John William Giraldes, Julie Boisclair, Chen Christine Hiu-Tung, Meir Glick, Zhao B. Kang, Morvarid Mohseni, Lawrence Blas Perez, Michael G. Acker, Sarah Williams, Matthew J. LaMarche, Martin Sendzik, Michelle Fodor, Huia-Xiang Hao, Peter Fekkes, Minying Pu, Travis Stams, Stanley Spence, and Andriana Jouk
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Drug ,Programmed cell death ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Allosteric regulation ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Protein Tyrosine Phosphatase, Non-Receptor Type 11 ,Protein tyrosine phosphatase ,Pharmacology ,01 natural sciences ,03 medical and health sciences ,Mice ,Dogs ,Allosteric Regulation ,In vivo ,Neoplasms ,Drug Discovery ,medicine ,Tumor Cells, Cultured ,Animals ,Humans ,Enzyme Inhibitors ,Gene ,030304 developmental biology ,media_common ,0303 health sciences ,Chemistry ,Cancer ,medicine.disease ,Xenograft Model Antitumor Assays ,0104 chemical sciences ,Rats ,PTPN11 ,010404 medicinal & biomolecular chemistry ,Macaca fascicularis ,Molecular Medicine - Abstract
SHP2 is a nonreceptor protein tyrosine phosphatase encoded by the PTPN11 gene and is involved in cell growth and differentiation via the MAPK signaling pathway. SHP2 also plays an important role in the programed cell death pathway (PD-1/PD-L1). As an oncoprotein as well as a potential immunomodulator, controlling SHP2 activity is of high therapeutic interest. As part of our comprehensive program targeting SHP2, we identified multiple allosteric binding modes of inhibition and optimized numerous chemical scaffolds in parallel. In this drug annotation report, we detail the identification and optimization of the pyrazine class of allosteric SHP2 inhibitors. Structure and property based drug design enabled the identification of protein-ligand interactions, potent cellular inhibition, control of physicochemical, pharmaceutical and selectivity properties, and potent in vivo antitumor activity. These studies culminated in the discovery of TNO155, (3S,4S)-8-(6-amino-5-((2-amino-3-chloropyridin-4-yl)thio)pyrazin-2-yl)-3-methyl-2-oxa-8-azaspiro[4.5]decan-4-amine (1), a highly potent, selective, orally efficacious, and first-in-class SHP2 inhibitor currently in clinical trials for cancer.
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- 2020
16. Allosteric Inhibition of SHP2: Identification of a Potent, Selective, and Orally Efficacious Phosphatase Inhibitor
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Matthew J. LaMarche, Peter Fekkes, Jorge Garcia Fortanet, Michael Shultz, Denise Grunenfelder, Zhouliang Chen, Gang Liu, Chen Christine Hiu-Tung, Minying Pu, Travis Stams, Pascal D. Fortin, Palermo Mark G, Ping Wang, Samuel B. Ho, Brant Firestone, Matthew J. Meyer, Dyuti Majumdar, Laura R. LaBonte, Francois Lenoir, Rajesh Karki, Nick Keen, Cary Fridrich, Michelle Fodor, Jay Larrow, Sarah Williams, Christopher Towler, Timothy Michael Ramsey, Ji-Hu Zhang, Franco Lombardo, Ying-Nan P. Chen, Zhan Deng, Mitsunori Kato, Zhao B. Kang, Lawrence Blas Perez, Shumei Liu, and William R. Sellers
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Male ,Models, Molecular ,0301 basic medicine ,Programmed cell death ,Allosteric modulator ,Protein Conformation ,Allosteric regulation ,Administration, Oral ,Mice, Nude ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Protein Tyrosine Phosphatase, Non-Receptor Type 11 ,Protein tyrosine phosphatase ,Crystallography, X-Ray ,Structure-Activity Relationship ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Protein structure ,Allosteric Regulation ,Piperidines ,Cell Line, Tumor ,Drug Discovery ,Animals ,Humans ,Structure–activity relationship ,Chemistry ,Small molecule ,High-Throughput Screening Assays ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,PTPN11 ,Pyrimidines ,030104 developmental biology ,Biochemistry ,Drug Design ,Pyrazines ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Heterografts ,Molecular Medicine ,Female ,Allosteric Site ,Neoplasm Transplantation - Abstract
SHP2 is a nonreceptor protein tyrosine phosphatase (PTP) encoded by the PTPN11 gene involved in cell growth and differentiation via the MAPK signaling pathway. SHP2 also purportedly plays an important role in the programmed cell death pathway (PD-1/PD-L1). Because it is an oncoprotein associated with multiple cancer-related diseases, as well as a potential immunomodulator, controlling SHP2 activity is of significant therapeutic interest. Recently in our laboratories, a small molecule inhibitor of SHP2 was identified as an allosteric modulator that stabilizes the autoinhibited conformation of SHP2. A high throughput screen was performed to identify progressable chemical matter, and X-ray crystallography revealed the location of binding in a previously undisclosed allosteric binding pocket. Structure-based drug design was employed to optimize for SHP2 inhibition, and several new protein-ligand interactions were characterized. These studies culminated in the discovery of 6-(4-amino-4-methylpiperidin-1-yl)-3-(2,3-dichlorophenyl)pyrazin-2-amine (SHP099, 1), a potent, selective, orally bioavailable, and efficacious SHP2 inhibitor.
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- 2016
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17. Allosteric inhibition of SHP2 phosphatase inhibits cancers driven by receptor tyrosine kinases
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Palermo Mark G, Timothy Michael Ramsey, Ping Zhu, Shumei Liu, Jay Larrow, Laura R. La Bonte, Rajesh Karki, Chen Christine Hiu-Tung, Kavitha Venkatesan, Jaison Jacob, Pascal D. Fortin, Francois Lenoir, Hui Gao, Guizhi Yang, Matthew J. Meyer, Ji-Hu Zhang, William R. Sellers, Michael Shultz, Denise Grunenfelder, Edmund Price, Jorge Garcia-Fortanet, Feng Fei, Zhouliang Chen, Gang Liu, Vesselina G. Cooke, Jing Yuan, Michelle Fodor, Ping Wang, Minying Pu, Nicholas Keen, Samuel B. Ho, Kathy Hsiao, Markus Warmuth, Travis Stams, Christopher Quinn, Mitsunori Kato, Subarna Shakya, Sarah Williams, Dyuti Majumdar, Peter Fekkes, Michael G. Acker, Cary Fridrich, Joanna Slisz, Huaixiang Hao, Matthew J. LaMarche, Ying-Nan P. Chen, Brandon Antonakos, Jason R. Dobson, Brant Firestone, Lawrence Blas Perez, Zhao B. Kang, Ho Man Chan, and Zhan Deng
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0301 basic medicine ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,Cell growth ,Protein tyrosine phosphatase ,Receptor tyrosine kinase ,Immune checkpoint ,Cell biology ,PTPN11 ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,Growth factor receptor ,biology.protein ,Signal transduction ,Tyrosine - Abstract
SHP099, a selective inhibitor of signalling meditator SHP2 with drug-like properties, has an allosteric mechanism of action whereby it stabilizes SHP2 in an auto-inhibited conformation, and suppresses RAS–ERK signalling and proliferation in receptor-tyrosine-kinase-driven cancer cell lines and mouse tumour xenograft models. The tyrosine phosphatase SHP2 is a key mediator of receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK) signalling, as well as being important in immune checkpoint pathways. Reduction of SHP2 activity suppresses tumour cell growth, and SHP2 is a potential, but so far elusive, therapeutic target in cancer. Pascal Fortin and colleagues report the development of a selective SHP2 inhibitor with drug-like properties. The inhibitor, SHP099, has an allosteric mechanism of action whereby it stabilizes SHP2 in an auto-inhibited conformation. It also suppresses RAS–ERK signalling to inhibit RTK-driven proliferation in human cancer cell lines and mouse tumour xenograft models. The non-receptor protein tyrosine phosphatase SHP2, encoded by PTPN11, has an important role in signal transduction downstream of growth factor receptor signalling and was the first reported oncogenic tyrosine phosphatase1. Activating mutations of SHP2 have been associated with developmental pathologies such as Noonan syndrome and are found in multiple cancer types, including leukaemia, lung and breast cancer and neuroblastoma1,2,3,4,5. SHP2 is ubiquitously expressed and regulates cell survival and proliferation primarily through activation of the RAS–ERK signalling pathway2,3. It is also a key mediator of the programmed cell death 1 (PD-1) and B- and T-lymphocyte attenuator (BTLA) immune checkpoint pathways6,7. Reduction of SHP2 activity suppresses tumour cell growth and is a potential target of cancer therapy8,9. Here we report the discovery of a highly potent (IC50 = 0.071 μM), selective and orally bioavailable small-molecule SHP2 inhibitor, SHP099, that stabilizes SHP2 in an auto-inhibited conformation. SHP099 concurrently binds to the interface of the N-terminal SH2, C-terminal SH2, and protein tyrosine phosphatase domains, thus inhibiting SHP2 activity through an allosteric mechanism. SHP099 suppresses RAS–ERK signalling to inhibit the proliferation of receptor-tyrosine-kinase-driven human cancer cells in vitro and is efficacious in mouse tumour xenograft models. Together, these data demonstrate that pharmacological inhibition of SHP2 is a valid therapeutic approach for the treatment of cancers.
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- 2016
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18. Optimization of 3-Pyrimidin-4-yl-oxazolidin-2-ones as Orally Bioavailable and Brain Penetrant Mutant IDH1 Inhibitors
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Julia Dooley, Gang Liu, Ali Farsidjani, Gregg Chenail, Raymond Pagliarini, Brant Firestone, Thomas Caferro, Palermo Mark G, Kelly Slocum, Tycho Heimbach, Julian Levell, Brian Villalba, Ty Gould, Qian Zhao, Young Shin Cho, Stephanie Kay Dodd, Cynthia M. Shafer, Joseph D. Growney, James Sutton, Guiqing Liang, Martin Sendzik, Manning James R, Jinyun Chen, Minying Pu, and Abran Costales
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0301 basic medicine ,IDH1 ,010405 organic chemistry ,Chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Allosteric regulation ,Mutant ,medicine.disease ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,In vitro ,0104 chemical sciences ,Bioavailability ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,Isocitrate dehydrogenase ,In vivo ,Glioma ,Drug Discovery ,medicine ,Cancer research - Abstract
[Image: see text] Mutant isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 (IDH1) is an attractive therapeutic target for the treatment of various cancers such as AML, glioma, and glioblastoma. We have evaluated 3-pyrimidin-4-yl-oxazolidin-2-ones as mutant IDH1 inhibitors that bind to an allosteric, induced pocket of IDH1(R132H). This Letter describes SAR exploration focused on improving both the in vitro and in vivo metabolic stability of the compounds, leading to the identification of 19 as a potent and selective mutant IDH1 inhibitor that has demonstrated brain penetration and excellent oral bioavailability in rodents. In a preclinical patient-derived IDH1 mutant xenograft tumor model study, 19 efficiently inhibited the production of the biomarker 2-HG.
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- 2018
19. Discovery and Evaluation of Clinical Candidate IDH305, a Brain Penetrant Mutant IDH1 Inhibitor
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Michael Shultz, Julia Dooley, Gang Liu, Kelly Slocum, James Sutton, Ali Farsidjani, Raymond Pagliarini, Guiqing Liang, Ty Gould, Abran Costales, Martin Sendzik, Young Shin Cho, Brian Villalba, Joseph D. Growney, Julian Levell, Tycho Heimbach, Qian Zhao, Gregg Chenail, Manning James R, Xiaoling Xie, Stephanie Kay Dodd, Cynthia M. Shafer, Minying Pu, Brant Firestone, Raviraj Kulathila, Thomas Caferro, and Jinyun Chen
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0301 basic medicine ,IDH1 ,Organic Chemistry ,Mutant ,Allosteric regulation ,Treatment options ,Pharmacology ,Biology ,Biochemistry ,Clinical trial ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,0302 clinical medicine ,In vivo ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Drug Discovery ,Hotspot mutation ,Tumor xenograft - Abstract
Inhibition of mutant IDH1 is being evaluated clinically as a promising treatment option for various cancers with hotspot mutation at Arg132. Having identified an allosteric, induced pocket of IDH1R132H, we have explored 3-pyrimidin-4-yl-oxazolidin-2-ones as mutant IDH1 inhibitors for in vivo modulation of 2-HG production and potential brain penetration. We report here optimization efforts toward the identification of clinical candidate IDH305 (13), a potent and selective mutant IDH1 inhibitor that has demonstrated brain exposure in rodents. Preclinical characterization of this compound exhibited in vivo correlation of 2-HG reduction and efficacy in a patient-derived IDH1 mutant xenograft tumor model. IDH305 (13) has progressed into human clinical trials for the treatment of cancers with IDH1 mutation.
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- 2017
20. IDH1 Mutations Alter Citric Acid Cycle Metabolism and Increase Dependence on Oxidative Mitochondrial Metabolism
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Erika Handly, Joseph D. Growney, Kelly Slocum, Anne N. Murphy, Courtney R. Green, Fallon Lin, Xiamei Zhang, Christian M. Metallo, Seth J. Parker, Chad Vickers, Christopher Straub, Alexandra R. Grassian, Matthew G. Vander Heiden, Raymond Pagliarini, Minying Pu, Ajit S. Divakaruni, Carol Joud-Caldwell, Franklin Chung, Hong Yin, Shawn M. Davidson, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Biology, Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research at MIT, Davidson, Shawn M, and Vander Heiden, Matthew G.
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Cancer Research ,Glutamine ,Physiological ,Citric Acid Cycle ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Mutant ,Mutation, Missense ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Oxidative phosphorylation ,Biology ,Stress ,medicine.disease_cause ,Article ,Mice ,Stress, Physiological ,Metabolic flux analysis ,Genetics ,medicine ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Animals ,Humans ,Oncology & Carcinogenesis ,Aetiology ,Enzyme Inhibitors ,Cancer ,Mutation ,Metabolism ,HCT116 Cells ,Xenograft Model Antitumor Assays ,Isogenic human disease models ,Isocitrate Dehydrogenase ,Cell Hypoxia ,Mitochondria ,Citric acid cycle ,Isocitrate dehydrogenase ,Oncology ,Biochemistry ,Missense ,Oxidation-Reduction - Abstract
Oncogenic mutations in isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 and 2 (IDH1/2) occur in several types of cancer, but the metabolic consequences of these genetic changes are not fully understood. In this study, we performed 13C metabolic flux analysis on a panel of isogenic cell lines containing heterozygous IDH1/2 mutations. We observed that under hypoxic conditions, IDH1-mutant cells exhibited increased oxidative tricarboxylic acid metabolism along with decreased reductive glutamine metabolism, but not IDH2-mutant cells. However, selective inhibition of mutant IDH1 enzyme function could not reverse the defect in reductive carboxylation activity. Furthermore, this metabolic reprogramming increased the sensitivity of IDH1-mutant cells to hypoxia or electron transport chain inhibition in vitro. Lastly, IDH1-mutant cells also grew poorly as subcutaneous xenografts within a hypoxic in vivo microenvironment. Together, our results suggest therapeutic opportunities to exploit the metabolic vulnerabilities specific to IDH1 mutation., National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grants R01CA168653 and 5-P30-CA14051-39), David H. Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research at MIT. DFHCC Bridge Project, Burroughs Wellcome Fund, Smith Family Foundation, Virginia and D.K. Ludwig Fund for Cancer Research, Damon Runyon Cancer Research Foundation
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- 2014
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21. Phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase is dispensable for breast tumor maintenance and growth
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Hui Gao, Raymond Pagliarini, Guizhi Yang, Vladimir Capka, Bryan Laffitte, Wei Jiang, Savina Jaeger, Yaoyu Chen, Shailaja Kasibhatla, Wenlai Zhou, Franklin Chung, Hong Yin, Minying Pu, and Jinyun Chen
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Cell Growth Process ,Breast Neoplasms ,Cell Growth Processes ,Biology ,Mice ,Breast cancer ,Cell Line, Tumor ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase ,RNA, Small Interfering ,PHGDH ,Phosphoglycerate Dehydrogenase ,Cell growth ,Cancer ,medicine.disease ,Warburg effect ,in vivo ,Cell Transformation, Neoplastic ,Oncology ,Anaerobic glycolysis ,Gene Knockdown Techniques ,Cancer cell ,MCF-7 Cells ,Cancer research ,Heterografts ,Female ,breast cancer cells ,Research Paper - Abstract
Cancer cells rely on aerobic glycolysis to maintain cell growth and proliferation via the Warburg effect. Phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase (PHDGH) catalyzes the first step of the serine biosynthetic pathway downstream of glycolysis, which is a metabolic gatekeeper both for macromolecular biosynthesis and serine-dependent DNA synthesis. Here, we report that PHDGH is overexpressed in many ER-negative human breast cancer cell lines. PHGDH knockdown in these cells leads to a reduction of serine synthesis and impairment of cancer cell proliferation. However, PHGDH knockdown does not affect tumor maintenance and growth in established breast cancer xenograft models, suggesting that PHGDH-dependent cancer cell growth may be context-dependent. Our findings suggest that other mechanisms or pathways may bypass exclusive dependence on PHGDH in established human breast cancer xenografts, indicating that PHGDH is dispensable for the growth and maintenance and of tumors in vivo.
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- 2013
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22. Optimization of the in Vitro Cardiac Safety of Hydroxamate-Based Histone Deacetylase Inhibitors
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Chen Christine Hiu-Tung, Remiszewski Stacy W, Jianmei Fan, Alex Fekete, Brant Firestone, Joseph D. Growney, Christopher T. Meta, Joe Eckman, Dyuti Majumdar, Ping Wang, Peter Atadja, Vinita Uttamsingh, Liping Zhou, Laszlo Urban, Qiang Lu, Meier Hsu, Suzanne Skolnik, Lei Jiang, Tim Ramsey, Martin Traebert, Yan Yan-Neale, Minying Pu, Julie Flynn, Lawrence Blas Perez, Yung-Mae Yao, Xueying Cao, Franco Lombardo, Steven Whitebread, Mats Holmqvist, Lewis Whitehead, Young Shin Cho, Paul Kwon, N Davis, Jack Green, Daniel Jansson, Michael Shultz, and Gang Liu
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Models, Molecular ,ERG1 Potassium Channel ,congenital, hereditary, and neonatal diseases and abnormalities ,Patch-Clamp Techniques ,Transplantation, Heterologous ,hERG ,Mice, Nude ,Antineoplastic Agents ,In Vitro Techniques ,Pharmacology ,Hydroxamic Acids ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Mice ,Radioligand Assay ,Structure-Activity Relationship ,Drug Discovery ,Animals ,Humans ,Structure–activity relationship ,Tissue Distribution ,cardiovascular diseases ,Homology modeling ,Ion channel ,Acrylamides ,biology ,Chemistry ,Stereoisomerism ,HCT116 Cells ,Ether-A-Go-Go Potassium Channels ,In vitro ,Rats ,Histone Deacetylase Inhibitors ,Transplantation ,Microsomes, Liver ,biology.protein ,Molecular Medicine ,Histone deacetylase ,Drug Screening Assays, Antitumor ,Pharmacophore ,Neoplasm Transplantation ,Half-Life - Abstract
Histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitors have shown promise in treating various forms of cancer. However, many HDAC inhibitors from diverse structural classes have been associated with QT prolongation in humans. Inhibition of the human ether a-go-go related gene (hERG) channel has been associated with QT prolongation and fatal arrhythmias. To determine if the observed cardiac effects of HDAC inhibitors in humans is due to hERG blockade, a highly potent HDAC inhibitor devoid of hERG activity was required. Starting with dacinostat (LAQ824), a highly potent HDAC inhibitor, we explored the SAR to determine the pharmacophores required for HDAC and hERG inhibition. We disclose here the results of these efforts where a high degree of pharmacophore homology between these two targets was discovered. This similarity prevented traditional strategies for mitigating hERG binding/modulation from being successful and novel approaches for reducing hERG inhibition were required. Using a hERG homology model, two compounds, 11r and 25i, were discovered to be highly efficacious with weak affinity for the hERG and other ion channels.
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- 2011
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23. Reduced Myocardial Ischemia-Reperfusion Injury in Toll-Like Receptor 4-Deficient Mice
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Xiaoli Liu, Ralph A. Kelly, Jun-ichi Oyama, Todd Bourcier, Charles Blais, Minying Pu, and Lester Kobzik
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Lipopolysaccharide ,Myocardial Infarction ,Ischemia ,Myocardial Reperfusion Injury ,Receptors, Cell Surface ,Inflammation ,Pharmacology ,Mice ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Physiology (medical) ,medicine ,Animals ,Myocardial infarction ,Receptor ,Mice, Knockout ,Mice, Inbred C3H ,Toll-like receptor ,Membrane Glycoproteins ,business.industry ,Toll-Like Receptors ,medicine.disease ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Toll-Like Receptor 4 ,chemistry ,Immunology ,TLR4 ,medicine.symptom ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Reperfusion injury - Abstract
Background—Myocardial ischemia and reperfusion-induced tissue injury involve a robust inflammatory response, but the proximal events in reperfusion injury remain incompletely defined. Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) is a proximal signaling receptor in innate immune responses to lipopolysaccharide of Gram-negative pathogens. TLR4 is also expressed in the heart and vasculature, but a role for TLR4 in the myocardial response to injury separate from microbial pathogens has not been examined. This study assessed the role of TLR4 in myocardial infarction and inflammation in a murine model of ischemia-reperfusion injury.Methods and Results—Myocardial ischemia-reperfusion (MIR) was performed on 2 strains of TLR4-deficient mice (C57/BL10 ScCr and C3H/HeJ) and controls (C57/BL10 ScSn and C3H/OuJ). Mice were subjected to 1 hour of coronary ligation, followed by 24 hours of reperfusion. TLR4-deficient mice sustained significantly smaller infarctions compared with control mice given similar areas at risk. Fewer neutrophils infiltrated the myocardium of TLR4-deficient Cr mice after MIR, indicated by less myeloperoxidase activity and fewer CD45/GR1-positive cells. The myocardium of TLR4-deficient Cr mice contained fewer lipid peroxides and less complement deposition compared with control mice after MIR. Serum levels of interleukin-12, interferon-γ, and endotoxin were not increased after ischemia-reperfusion. Neutrophil trafficking in the peritoneum was similar in all strains after injection of thioglycollate.Conclusions—TLR4-deficient mice sustain smaller infarctions and exhibit less inflammation after myocardial ischemia-reperfusion injury. The data suggest that in addition to its role in innate immune responses, TLR4 serves a proinflammatory role in murine myocardial ischemia-reperfusion injury.
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- 2004
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24. Abstract 2084: Conformational activation and allosteric inhibition of SHP2 in RTK-driven cancers
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Kavitha Venkatesan, Jaison Jacob, Shumei Liu, Fei Feng, Brandon Antonakos, Zhao B. Kang, Jonathan R. LaRochelle, Jason R. Dobson, Hui Gao, Laura R. La Bonte, Huaixiang Hao, Rajesh Karki, Samuel B. Ho, Guizhi Yang, Markus Warmuth, Ping Zhu, Matthew J. LaMarche, Brant Firestone, Matthew J. Meyer, Stephen C. Blacklow, Edmund Price, Kathy Hsiao, Jorge Garcia-Fortanet, Zhuoliang Chen, Chen Christine Hiu-Tung, Palermo Mark G, Vesselina G. Cooke, Cary Fridrich, Jay Larrow, Ping Wang, Sarah Williams, Ying-Nan P. Chen, Subarna Shakya, William R. Sellers, Nicholas Keen, Jing Yuan, Michael Shultz, Gang Liu, Michelle Fodor, Michael G. Acker, Pascal D. Fortin, Ho Man Chan, Timothy Michael Ramsey, Zhan Deng, Ji-Hu Zhang, Mitsunori Kato, Dyuti Majumdar, Peter Fekkes, Minying Pu, and Travis Stams
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Cancer Research ,biology ,Philosophy ,Allosteric regulation ,Cancer therapy ,Protein tyrosine phosphatase ,medicine.disease ,Mapk signaling ,Oncology ,Allosteric enzyme ,Neuroblastoma ,Cancer research ,medicine ,biology.protein ,Tumor growth ,Majumdar - Abstract
The non-receptor protein tyrosine phosphatase (PTP) SHP2 is an important component of RTK signaling in response to growth factor stimulus and sits just upstream of the RAS-MAPK signaling cascade. The first oncogenic phosphatase to be identified, SHP2 is dysregulated in multiple human diseases including the developmental disorders Noonan and Leopard syndromes, as well as leukemia, lung cancer and neuroblastoma where aberrant activity of SHP2 leads to uncontrolled MAPK signaling. Cancer-associated activating mutations in SHP2 impart an “auto-on” state of the enzyme, boosting basal activity by shifting the equilibrium away from the auto-inhibited state. Reduction of SHP2 activity through genetic knockdown suppresses tumor growth, validating SHP2 as a target for cancer therapy. SHP099, a recently reported potent and selective allosteric inhibitor of SHP2, stabilizes the auto-inhibited form of SHP2 through interactions with the N-terminal SH2 and C-terminal PTP domains of the protein. SHP099 suppresses MAPK signaling in RTK amplified cancers resulting in suppressed proliferation in vitro and inhibition of tumor growth in mouse tumor xenograft models. Together, these data demonstrate the therapeutic potential of SHP2 inhibition in the treatment of cancer and other RAS/MAPK-linked diseases. Citation Format: Michael G. Acker, Ying-Nan P. Chen, Matthew J. LaMarche, Ho Man Chan, Peter Fekkes, Jorge Garcia-Fortanet, Jonathan R. LaRochelle, Brandon Antonakos, Christine Hiu-Tung Chen, Zhuoliang Chen, Vesselina G. Cooke, Jason R. Dobson, Zhan Deng, Fei Feng, Brant Firestone, Michelle Fodor, Cary Fridrich, Hui Gao, Huai-Xiang Hao, Jaison Jacob, Samuel Ho, Kathy Hsiao, Zhao B. Kang, Rajesh Karki, Mitsunori Kato, Jay Larrow, Laura R. La Bonte, Gang Liu, Shumei Liu, Dyuti Majumdar, Matthew J. Meyer, Mark Palermo, Minying Pu, Edmund Price, Subarna Shakya, Michael D. Shultz, Kavitha Venkatesan, Ping Wang, Markus Warmuth, Sarah Williams, Guizhi Yang, Jing Yuan, Ji-Hu Zhang, Ping Zhu, Stephen C. Blacklow, Timothy Ramsey, Nicholas J. Keen, William R. Sellers, Travis Stams, Pascal D. Fortin. Conformational activation and allosteric inhibition of SHP2 in RTK-driven cancers [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2017; 2017 Apr 1-5; Washington, DC. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2017;77(13 Suppl):Abstract nr 2084. doi:10.1158/1538-7445.AM2017-2084
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- 2017
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25. Identification of NVP-TNKS656: the use of structure-efficiency relationships to generate a highly potent, selective, and orally active tankyrase inhibitor
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Atwood K. Cheung, Minying Pu, Travis Stams, Donovan N. Chin, Dyuti Majumdar, Pascal D. Fortin, Francois Lenoir, Lei Huangshu, Pham Ly Luu, Run Ming Wang, Christina A. Kirby, Etienne Ochala, Aleem Fazal, Dipietro Lucian, Bharat Lagu, Chen Christine Hiu-Tung, Yun Feng, Palermo Mark G, Wenlin Shao, Ronald Tomlinson, Nigel J. Waters, Michael Shultz, Brant Firestone, Zhouliang Chen, Jianmei Fan, Ty Gould, Michael Scott Visser, B. Barry Touré, and Troy Smith
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chemistry.chemical_classification ,Models, Molecular ,Tankyrases ,Dihydropyran ,Druggability ,Antagonist ,Wnt signaling pathway ,Administration, Oral ,Biological Availability ,Pyrimidinones ,Tankyrase-1 ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Mice ,Structure-Activity Relationship ,Enzyme ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,In vivo ,Lipophilic efficiency ,Area Under Curve ,Drug Discovery ,Acetamides ,Molecular Medicine ,Animals ,Enzyme Inhibitors - Abstract
Tankyrase 1 and 2 have been shown to be redundant, druggable nodes in the Wnt pathway. As such, there has been intense interest in developing agents suitable for modulating the Wnt pathway in vivo by targeting this enzyme pair. By utilizing a combination of structure-based design and LipE-based structure efficiency relationships, the core of XAV939 was optimized into a more stable, more efficient, but less potent dihydropyran motif 7. This core was combined with elements of screening hits 2, 19, and 33 and resulted in highly potent, selective tankyrase inhibitors that are novel three pocket binders. NVP-TNKS656 (43) was identified as an orally active antagonist of Wnt pathway activity in the MMTV-Wnt1 mouse xenograft model. With an enthalpy-driven thermodynamic signature of binding, highly favorable physicochemical properties, and high lipophilic efficiency, NVP-TNKS656 is a novel tankyrase inhibitor that is well suited for further in vivo validation studies.
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- 2013
26. Activity of deacetylase inhibitor panobinostat (LBH589) in cutaneous T-cell lymphoma models: Defining molecular mechanisms of resistance
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Gregory O'Connor, Peter Atadja, Paul Kwon, Yun Feng, Minying Pu, Wenjing Zhu, Joseph D. Growney, Wenlin Shao, Yung-mae Yao, and Stephen Fawell
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Cancer Research ,Indoles ,Skin Neoplasms ,medicine.drug_class ,T cell ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Mice, SCID ,Biology ,Hydroxamic Acids ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Mice ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,Panobinostat ,Cell Line, Tumor ,medicine ,Cytotoxic T cell ,Animals ,Humans ,Cell Proliferation ,bcl-2-Associated X Protein ,Cell Death ,Cutaneous T-cell lymphoma ,Histone deacetylase inhibitor ,medicine.disease ,Xenograft Model Antitumor Assays ,Lymphoma, T-Cell, Cutaneous ,Histone Deacetylase Inhibitors ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Oncology ,chemistry ,Apoptosis ,Drug Resistance, Neoplasm ,Cancer cell ,Cancer research ,Female ,RNA Interference ,Growth inhibition - Abstract
Panobinostat (LBH589) is a highly potent deacetylase inhibitor that has demonstrated clinical efficacy in patients with advanced cutaneous T-cell lymphoma (CTCL). To gain a better understanding of the compound activity in this tumor type, we investigated the cellular and molecular effects of panobinostat using both in vitro and in vivo models of CTCL. All 4 tested CTCL cell lines exhibited very high sensitivity to panobinostat-induced growth inhibition. However, only 2 of 4 lines exhibited significant response to the cytotoxic activity of panobinostat. In a CTCL xenograft mouse tumor model, panobinostat treatment resulted in complete tumor regression. The difference in cell sensitivity to panobinostat-induced death enabled us to further investigate potential mechanisms responsible for tumor sensitivity or resistance. In CTCL cell lines that were insensitive to panobinostat-induced apoptosis, constitutively activated NF-kappaB and high levels of Bcl-2 were observed. Inhibition of Bcl-2 sensitized cells to the cytotoxic activity of panobinostat. Conversely, knockdown of Bax diminished the CTCL cell sensitivity. Interestingly, panobinostat could induce cytotoxicity in vorinostat-resistant CTCL cells by downregulating phosphorylated STAT3 and STAT5 proteins. These studies suggest distinct mechanisms responsible for resistance to different deacetylase inhibitors. We show that the intrinsic apoptotic signaling plays an essential role in mediating panobinostat anticancer activity. Moreover, cancer cell sensitivity to panobinostat treatment may be further improved by combination with inhibition of anti-apoptotic factors. These data provide preclinical support that panobinostat, as a single agent or in combination with other anticancer agents, is a promising therapy for CTCL.
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- 2010
27. The angiogenesis inhibitor NM-3 is active against human NSCLC xenografts alone and in combination with docetaxel
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Hiroko Nogi, Naoki Agata, Michael Bamberg, Steven D. Weitman, Donald Kufe, Surender Kharbanda, Minying Pu, and Michael Milhollen
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Cancer Research ,Lung Neoplasms ,Cell Survival ,Mice, Nude ,Angiogenesis Inhibitors ,Docetaxel ,Pharmacology ,Toxicology ,Mice ,Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung ,Cell Line, Tumor ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Lung cancer ,neoplasms ,Antitumor activity ,business.industry ,Neoplasms, Experimental ,medicine.disease ,Antineoplastic Agents, Phytogenic ,In vitro ,respiratory tract diseases ,Angiogenesis inhibitor ,Human tumor ,Oncology ,Isocoumarins ,Toxicity ,Taxoids ,Drug Screening Assays, Antitumor ,business ,Clinical evaluation ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The novel isocoumarin 2-(8-hydroxy-6-methoxy-1-oxo-1 H-2-benzopyran-3-yl) propionic acid (NM-3) has completed phase I clinical evaluation as an orally bioavailable angiogenesis inhibitor. NM-3 directly kills both endothelial and tumor cells in vitro at low mM concentrations and is effective in the treatment of diverse human tumor xenografts in mice. The present work has assessed the activity of NM-3 against human non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) cells when used alone and in combination with docetaxel. The results demonstrate that NM-3 decreases clonogenic survival of NSCLC cells at clinically achievable concentrations. The results also demonstrate that NM-3 is effective in the treatment of NSCLC (A549, NCI-H460) tumor xenografts in mice. Moreover, NM-3 potentiated the antitumor activity of docetaxel against NSCLC xenografts without increasing toxicity. Our findings indicate that NM-3 may be effective alone or in combination with docetaxel in the treatment of patients with NSCLC.
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- 2004
28. Abstract LB-139: IDH1 mutations alter citric acid cycle metabolism and increase dependence on oxidative mitochondrial metabolism
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Kelly Slocum, Anne N. Murphy, Chad Vickers, Seth J. Parker, Christopher Sean Straub, Franklin Chung, Alexandra R. Grassian, Minying Pu, Erika Handly, Fallon Lin, Raymond Pagliarini, Ajit S. Divakaruni, Christian M. Metallo, Xiamei Zhang, Hong Yin, Matt Vander Heiden, Carol Joud-Caldwell, Joseph D. Growney, Shawn M. Davidson, and Courtney R. Green
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Citric acid cycle ,Cancer Research ,IDH1 ,Isocitrate dehydrogenase ,Oncology ,Biochemistry ,Mutant ,Endogeny ,Metabolism ,Oxidative phosphorylation ,Biology ,IDH2 - Abstract
Mutations in the genes encoding isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 and 2 (IDH1/2) occur in a variety of tumor types, resulting in production of the proposed oncometabolite, 2-hydroxyglutarate (2-HG). How mutant IDH alters central carbon metabolism, though, remains unclear. To address this question, we performed 13C metabolic flux analysis (MFA) on an isogenic cell panel containing heterozygous IDH1/2 mutations. We observe a dramatic and consistent decrease in the ability of IDH1, but not IDH2, mutant cell lines to utilize reductive glutamine metabolism via the carboxylation of α-ketoglutarate to isocitrate. Additionally we find that cells with IDH1 mutations exhibit increased oxidative tricarboxylic acid (TCA) metabolism. Similar metabolic trends were observed in vivo as well, and also in endogenous, non-engineered IDH1/2 mutant cell lines. Interestingly, IDH1-mutant specific inhibitors were unable to reverse the decrease in reductive metabolism, suggesting that this metabolic phenotype is independent of 2-HG. Furthermore, this metabolic reprogramming increases the sensitivity of IDH1 mutant cells to hypoxia or electron transport chain (ETC) inhibition in vitro. IDH1 mutant cells also grow poorly as subcutaneous xenografts within hypoxic in vivo microenvironments. These results suggest that exploiting metabolic defects specific to IDH1 mutant cells could be an interesting avenue to explore therapeutically. Citation Format: Alexandra R. Grassian, Seth Parker, Shawn Davidson, Ajit Divakaruni, Courtney Green, Xiamei Zhang, Kelly Slocum, Minying Pu, Fallon Lin, Chad Vickers, Carol Joud-Caldwell, Franklin Chung, Hong Yin, Erika Handly, Christopher Straub, Joseph D. Growney, Matt Vander Heiden, Anne Murphy, Raymond Pagliarini, Christian Metallo. IDH1 mutations alter citric acid cycle metabolism and increase dependence on oxidative mitochondrial metabolism. [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 105th Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research; 2014 Apr 5-9; San Diego, CA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2014;74(19 Suppl):Abstract nr LB-139. doi:10.1158/1538-7445.AM2014-LB-139
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- 2014
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29. Efficacy of Panobinostat (LBH589) in CTCL Cell Lines and a Murine Xenograft Model: Defining Molecular Pathways of Panobinostat Activity in CTCL
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Wenlin Shao, Gregory O'Connor, Peter Atadja, Yung-Mae Yao, Paul Kwon, Stephen Fawell, Joseph D. Growney, Minying Pu, and Yun Feng
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Immunology ,Cell Biology ,Hematology ,Pharmacology ,Biology ,Biochemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Cell culture ,In vivo ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,Panobinostat ,biology.protein ,Cytotoxic T cell ,Viability assay ,Growth inhibition ,Cytotoxicity ,STAT5 - Abstract
Panobinostat (LBH589) is a highly potent oral pan-deacetylase (DAC) inhibitor currently undergoing clinical development in hematologic and solid malignancies. Panobinostat demonstrated preliminary clinical efficacy in cutaneous T-cell lymphoma (CTCL) patients in a phase I trial, with 6 responders out of 10 patients. Here we report the characterization of the effects of panobinostat on CTCL cells in vitro and in a murine xenograft model of CTCL. Panobinostat was found to potently induce growth inhibition of all CTCL cell lines tested (HuT78, HuT102, MJ, and HH) and exhibited significant cytotoxic activity against two CTCL cell lines (HuT78 and HH). Panobinostat was found to induce activation of caspases 3 and 7 in HuT78 and HH cell lines, consistent with its effects on cell viability in these cells. To investigate the effect of panobinostat in vivo, an HH CTCL xenograft mouse model was treated with vehicle or different doses of panobinostat by iv administration qd×5 for 2 weeks. Treatment with panobinostat at 10 mg/kg resulted in complete tumor regression relative to vehicle-treated animals. To gain a better understanding of panobinostat activity in CTCL, molecular mechanisms underlying cell sensitivity or lack thereof were investigated. Inhibition of DAC activity as measured by hyperacetylation of histones H3, H4, and tubulin was observed equally in all four cell lines. Interestingly, CTCL cells insensitive to panobinostat cytotoxicity (HuT102 and MJ) were found to express significantly higher levels of IL-2 receptor and to secrete high levels of select cytokines, including IFN-α, IFN-γ, and TNF-α, as compared with CTCL cells sensitive to panobinostat-induced cytotoxicity. Contrary to panobinostat-sensitive CTCL cells, cells insensitive to panobinostat-induced cell death were found to contain constitutively active NF-κB signaling and elevated activation of STAT proteins. Panobinostat-insensitive HuT102 and MJ cell lines were also found to express high levels of the pro-survival protein Bcl-2, an anti-apoptotic target whose transcription can be activated by NF-κB signaling. Although inhibition of STAT5 activation using a JAK inhibitor did not confer panobinostat sensitivity in the HuT102 and MJ CTCL cell lines, combination of a Bcl-2 inhibitor with panobinostat revealed a synergistic effect on cytotoxicity in these CTCL cells. Such results suggest that blocking anti-apoptotic signaling in combination with panobinostat treatment is effective in conferring panobinostat sensitivity to CTCL cells refractory to panobinostat-induced cell death. These data demonstrate that panobinostat exhibits significant anti-cancer effects on CTCL cells both in vitro and in vivo at clinically attainable concentrations. In addition, we have identified a cellular mechanism of insensitivity to panobinostat and furthermore provided a potential approach for sensitizing cells to panobinostat treatment in combination with a Bcl-2 inhibitor. Panobinostat, as a single agent or in combination, is a promising therapy for CTCL and these studies support continued clinical evaluation of panobinostat in the treatment of CTCL.
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- 2007
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30. Efficacy of Panobinostat (LBH589) in Multiple Myeloma Cell Lines and In Vivo Mouse Model: Tumor-Specific Cytotoxicity and Protection of Bone Integrity in Multiple Myeloma
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Wenlin Shao, Yung-Mae Yao, Minying Pu, Peter Atadja, Jane Cheng, Joseph D. Growney, Andrew Spencer, Kenneth C. Anderson, Colleen Kowal, Christine Miller, Stephen Fawell, Brant Firestone, Youzhen Wang, Joseph Eckman, and Jesús F. San Miguel
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business.industry ,Bortezomib ,Immunology ,Cell Biology ,Hematology ,medicine.disease ,Biochemistry ,Thalidomide ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,In vivo ,Panobinostat ,medicine ,Cancer research ,Cytotoxic T cell ,Bone marrow ,Cytotoxicity ,business ,Multiple myeloma ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Panobinostat (LBH589) is a highly potent oral pan-deacetylase (DAC) inhibitor currently undergoing clinical development in hematologic and solid malignancies. Here we report the effects of panobinostat on multiple myeloma (MM) cells in vitro and in a murine xenograft model in vivo. Panobinostat exhibited potent cytotoxic activity (IC50
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- 2007
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