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AMG 176, a Selective MCL1 Inhibitor, Is Effective in Hematologic Cancer Models Alone and in Combination with Established Therapies

Authors :
Jia-Nan Gong
Angela Coxon
Sean Caenepeel
Cyril H. Benes
Andrew W. Roberts
Tao Osgood
Donia M Moujalled
Elaina Cajulis
Andrew H. Wei
Regina K. Egan
Mario G. Cardozo
Pedro J. Beltran
Liusheng Zhu
Marc Vimolratana
Sean P. Brown
Brian Lucas
Xin Huang
Gordon Moody
Paul E. Hughes
David C.S. Huang
Giovanna Pomilio
Joshua Taygerly
Jan Sun
Danny Chui
Leszek Poppe
Jude Canon
Douglas A. Whittington
Yunxiao Li
Manuel Zancanella
Nick A. Paras
Joseph McClanaghan
Xianghong Wang
Alan C. Cheng
Kathleen S. Keegan
Jonathan B. Houze
Leah J. Damon
Patricia Greninger
Brian Belmontes
Source :
Cancer discovery. 8(12)
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

The prosurvival BCL2 family member MCL1 is frequently dysregulated in cancer. To overcome the significant challenges associated with inhibition of MCL1 protein–protein interactions, we rigorously applied small-molecule conformational restriction, which culminated in the discovery of AMG 176, the first selective MCL1 inhibitor to be studied in humans. We demonstrate that MCL1 inhibition induces a rapid and committed step toward apoptosis in subsets of hematologic cancer cell lines, tumor xenograft models, and primary patient samples. With the use of a human MCL1 knock-in mouse, we demonstrate that MCL1 inhibition at active doses of AMG 176 is tolerated and correlates with clear pharmacodynamic effects, demonstrated by reductions in B cells, monocytes, and neutrophils. Furthermore, the combination of AMG 176 and venetoclax is synergistic in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) tumor models and in primary patient samples at tolerated doses. These results highlight the therapeutic promise of AMG 176 and the potential for combinations with other BH3 mimetics. Significance: AMG 176 is a potent, selective, and orally bioavailable MCL1 inhibitor that induces a rapid commitment to apoptosis in models of hematologic malignancies. The synergistic combination of AMG 176 and venetoclax demonstrates robust activity in models of AML at tolerated doses, highlighting the promise of BH3-mimetic combinations in hematologic cancers. See related commentary by Leber et al., p. 1511. This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 1494

Details

ISSN :
21598290
Volume :
8
Issue :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cancer discovery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5ecf4086e51963a2ef56014b0508efb2