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Eradication of ENO1-deleted Glioblastoma through Collateral Lethality

Authors :
Barbara Czako
Theresa Tran
Florian L. Muller
Paul G. Leonard
William G. Bornmann
Marszalek
Nikunj Satani
Yu-Hsi Lin
Dimitra K. Georgiou
Federica Pisaneschi
Rafal Zielinski
Yongying Jiang
Victoria C. Yan
Quanyun Xu
David Maxwell
Pijus K. Mandal
Ronald A. DePinho
Waldemar Priebe
Jeffrey J. Ackroyd
Naima Hammoudi
Zhijun Kang
John M. Asara
Sunada Khadka
Qi Wu
Susana Castro Pando
Xiaoping Wang
Yijun Sun
Zhenghong Peng
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2018.

Abstract

Inhibiting glycolysis remains an aspirational approach for the treatment of cancer. We recently demonstrated that SF2312, a natural product phosphonate antibiotic, is a potent inhibitor of the glycolytic enzyme Enolase with potential utility for the collateral lethality-based treatment of Enolase-deficient glioblastoma (GBM). However, phosphonates are anionic at physiological pH, limiting cell and tissue permeability. Here, we show that addition of pivaloyloxymethyl (POM) groups to SF2312 (POMSF) dramatically increases potency, leading to inhibition of glycolysis and killing of ENO1-deleted glioma cells in the low nM range. But the utility of POMSF in vivo is dose-limited by severe hemolytic anemia. A derivative, POMHEX, shows equipotency to POMSF without inducing hemolytic anemia. POMHEX can eradicate intracranial orthotopic ENO1-deleted tumors, despite sub-optimal pharmacokinetic properties. Taken together, our data provide in vivo proof-of-principal for collateral lethality in precision oncology and showcase POMHEX as a useful molecule for the study of glycolysis in cancer metabolism.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....97918cdfd67e6e064e7825593b3bb023
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/331538