Metabolic reprograming is an emerging hallmark of tumor biology and an actively pursued opportunity in discovery of oncology drugs. Extensive efforts have focused on therapeutic targeting of glycolysis, whereas drugging mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) has remained largely unexplored, partly owing to an incomplete understanding of tumor contexts in which OXPHOS is essential. Here, we report the discovery of IACS-010759, a clinical-grade small-molecule inhibitor of complex I of the mitochondrial electron transport chain. Treatment with IACS-010759 robustly inhibited proliferation and induced apoptosis in models of brain cancer and acute myeloid leukemia (AML) reliant on OXPHOS, likely owing to a combination of energy depletion and reduced aspartate production that leads to impaired nucleotide biosynthesis. In models of brain cancer and AML, tumor growth was potently inhibited in vivo following IACS-010759 treatment at well-tolerated doses. IACS-010759 is currently being evaluated in phase 1 clinical trials in relapsed/refractory AML and solid tumors.
B-cell leukemia/lymphoma 2 (BCL-2) prevents commitment to programmed cell
death at the mitochondrion. It remains a challenge to identify those tumors that
are best treated by inhibition of BCL-2. Here we demonstrate that acute myeloid
leukemia (AML) cell lines, primary patient samples, and murine primary
xenografts are very sensitive to treatment with the selective BCL-2 antagonist
ABT-199. In primary patient cells, the median IC50 was approximately 10 nM, and
cell death occurred within 2 h. Our ex vivo sensitivity results
compare favorably with those observed for chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), a
disease for which ABT-199 has demonstrated consistent activity in clinical
trials. Moreover, mitochondrial studies using BH3 profiling demonstrate activity
at the mitochondrion that correlates well with cytotoxicity, supporting an on
target mitochondrial mechanism of action. Our protein and BH3 profiling studies
provide promising tools that can be tested as predictive biomarkers in any
clinical trial of ABT-199 in AML.
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