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Salicylates enhance CRM1 inhibitor antitumor activity by induction of S-phase arrest and impairment of DNA-damage repair

Authors :
Jessica L. Phillips
Surendra Dasari
Chunling Hu
Jia Yu
Sameer A. Parikh
Ryan M. Carr
Ann C. Mladek
Jann N. Sarkaria
Rebecca L. King
Jonas Paludo
Matthew P. Goetz
Mary Stenson
Michelle K. Manske
Fergus J. Couch
Justin C. Boysen
Jithma P. Abeykoon
Xiaonan Hou
S. John Weroha
Thomas E. Witzig
Julian R. Molina
Judy C. Boughey
Mrinal M. Patnaik
Prashant Kapoor
Aishwarya Ravindran
Andrew L. Feldman
Xiaosheng Wu
Shaji Kumar
Steven I. Robinson
Liewei Wang
Kevin E. Nowakowski
Source :
Blood
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
American Society of Hematology, 2021.

Abstract

Chromosome region maintenance protein 1 (CRM1) mediates protein export from the nucleus and is a new target for anticancer therapeutics. Broader application of KPT-330 (selinexor), a first-in-class CRM1 inhibitor recently approved for relapsed multiple myeloma and diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, have been limited by substantial toxicity. We discovered that salicylates markedly enhance the antitumor activity of CRM1 inhibitors by extending the mechanisms of action beyond CRM1 inhibition. Using salicylates in combination enables targeting of a range of blood cancers with a much lower dose of selinexor, thereby potentially mitigating prohibitive clinical adverse effects. Choline salicylate (CS) with low-dose KPT-330 (K+CS) had potent, broad activity across high-risk hematological malignancies and solid-organ cancers ex vivo and in vivo. The K+CS combination was not toxic to nonmalignant cells as compared with malignant cells and was safe without inducing toxicity to normal organs in mice. Mechanistically, compared with KPT-330 alone, K+CS suppresses the expression of CRM1, Rad51, and thymidylate synthase proteins, leading to more efficient inhibition of CRM1-mediated nuclear export, impairment of DNA-damage repair, reduced pyrimidine synthesis, cell-cycle arrest in S-phase, and cell apoptosis. Moreover, the addition of poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase inhibitors further potentiates the K+CS antitumor effect. K+CS represents a new class of therapy for multiple types of blood cancers and will stimulate future investigations to exploit DNA-damage repair and nucleocytoplasmic transport for cancer therapy in general.

Details

ISSN :
15280020 and 00064971
Volume :
137
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Blood
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....cac8ff0cb580d038271b5efda2c12580
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1182/blood.2020009013