Preclinical Efficacy of LP-184, a Tumor Site Activated Synthetic Lethal Therapeutic, in Glioblastoma

Author:

Lal Bachchu1ORCID,Kulkarni Aditya2ORCID,McDermott Joseph2ORCID,Rais Rana345ORCID,Alt Jesse5ORCID,Wu Ying5ORCID,Lopez-Bertoni Hernando13ORCID,Sall Sophie1ORCID,Kathad Umesh2ORCID,Zhou Jianli2ORCID,Slusher Barbara S.3456ORCID,Bhatia Kishor2ORCID,Laterra John136ORCID

Affiliation:

1. 1Hugo W. Moser Research Institute at Kennedy Krieger, Baltimore, Maryland.

2. 2Lantern Pharma Inc., Dallas, Texas.

3. 3Department of Neurology, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland.

4. 4Department of Pharmacology and Molecular Sciences, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland.

5. 5Johns Hopkins Drug Discovery, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland.

6. 6Department of Oncology, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland.

Abstract

Abstract Purpose: Glioblastoma (GBM) is the most common brain malignancy with median survival <2 years. Standard-of-care temozolomide has marginal efficacy in approximately 70% of patients due to MGMT expression. LP-184 is an acylfulvene-derived prodrug activated by the oxidoreductase PTGR1 that alkylates at N3-adenine, not reported to be repaired by MGMT. This article examines LP-184 efficacy against preclinical GBM models and identifies molecular predictors of LP-184 efficacy in clinical GBM. Experimental Design: LP-184 effects on GBM cell viability and DNA damage were determined using cell lines, primary PDX-derived cells and patient-derived neurospheres. GBM cell sensitivities to LP-184 relative to temozolomide and MGMT expression were examined. Pharmacokinetics and CNS bioavailability were evaluated in mice with GBM xenografts. LP-184 effects on GBM xenograft growth and animal survival were determined. Machine learning, bioinformatic tools, and clinical databases identified molecular predictors of GBM cells and tumors to LP-184 responsiveness. Results: LP-184 inhibited viability of multiple GBM cell isolates including temozolomide-resistant and MGMT-expressing cells at IC50 = approximately 22–310 nmol/L. Pharmacokinetics showed favorable AUCbrain/plasma and AUCtumor/plasma ratios of 0.11 (brain Cmax = 839 nmol/L) and 0.2 (tumor Cmax = 2,530 nmol/L), respectively. LP-184 induced regression of GBM xenografts and prolonged survival of mice bearing orthotopic xenografts. Bioinformatic analyses identified PTGR1 elevation in clinical GBM subtypes and associated LP-184 sensitivity with EGFR signaling, low nucleotide excision repair (NER), and low ERCC3 expression. Spironolactone, which induces ERCC3 degradation, decreased LP-184 IC50 3 to 6 fold and enhanced GBM xenograft antitumor responses. Conclusions: These results establish LP-184 as a promising chemotherapeutic for GBM with enhanced efficacy in intrinsic or spironolactone-induced TC-NER–deficient tumors.

Funder

n/a

Publisher

American Association for Cancer Research (AACR)

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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