Aberrant activation of Wnt/β‐catenin signaling causes tumorigenesis and promotes the proliferation of colorectal cancer cells. Porcupine inhibitors, which block secretion of Wnt ligands, may have only limited clinical impact for the treatment of colorectal cancer, because most colorectal cancer is caused by loss‐of‐function mutations of the tumor suppressor adenomatous polyposis coli (APC) downstream of Wnt ligands. Tankyrase poly(ADP‐ribosyl)ates (PARylates) Axin, a negative regulator of β‐catenin. This post‐translational modification causes ubiquitin‐dependent degradation of Axin, resulting in β‐catenin accumulation. Tankyrase inhibitors downregulate β‐catenin and suppress the growth of APC‐mutated colorectal cancer cells. Herein, we report a novel tankyrase‐specific inhibitor RK‐287107, which inhibits tankyrase‐1 and ‐2 four‐ and eight‐fold more potently, respectively, than G007‐LK, a tankyrase inhibitor that has been previously reported as effective in mouse xenograft models. RK‐287107 causes Axin2 accumulation and downregulates β‐catenin, T‐cell factor/lymphoid enhancer factor reporter activity and the target gene expression in colorectal cancer cells harboring the shortly truncated APC mutations. Consistently, RK‐287107 inhibits the growth of APC‐mutated (β‐catenin‐dependent) colorectal cancer COLO‐320DM and SW403 cells but not the APC‐wild (β‐catenin‐independent) colorectal cancer RKO cells. Intraperitoneal or oral administration of RK‐287107 suppresses COLO‐320DM tumor growth in NOD‐SCID mice. Rates of tumor growth inhibition showed good correlation with the behavior of pharmacodynamic biomarkers, such as Axin2 accumulation and MYC downregulation. These observations indicate that RK‐287107 exerts a proof‐of‐concept antitumor effect, and thus may have potential for tankyrase‐directed molecular cancer therapy.
The canonical WNT pathway plays an
important role in cancer pathogenesis.
Inhibition of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase catalytic activity of the
tankyrases (TNKS/TNKS2) has been reported to reduce the Wnt/β-catenin
signal by preventing poly ADP-ribosylation-dependent degradation of
AXIN, a negative regulator of Wnt/β-catenin signaling. With
the goal of investigating the effects of tankyrase and Wnt pathway
inhibition on tumor growth, we set out to find small-molecule inhibitors
of TNKS/TNKS2 with suitable drug-like properties. Starting from 1a, a high-throughput screening hit, the spiroindoline derivative 40c (RK-287107) was discovered as a potent TNKS/TNKS2 inhibitor
with >7000-fold selectivity against the PARP1 enzyme, which inhibits
WNT-responsive TCF reporter activity and proliferation of human colorectal
cancer cell line COLO-320DM. RK-287107 also demonstrated dose-dependent
tumor growth inhibition in a mouse xenograft model. These observations
suggest that RK-287107 is a promising lead compound for the development
of novel tankyrase inhibitors as anticancer agents.
Tankyrases
(TNKS/TNKS2) belong to the poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase
family. Inhibition of their enzymatic activities attenuates the Wnt/β-catenin
signaling, which plays an important role in cancer pathogenesis. We
previously reported the discovery of RK-287107, a spiroindoline-based,
highly selective, potent tankyrase inhibitor. Herein we describe the
optimization process of RK-287107 leading to RK-582, which exhibits
a markedly improved robust tumor growth inhibition in a COLO-320DM
mouse xenograft model when orally administered. In addition to the
dose-dependent elevation and attenuation of the levels of biomarkers
AXIN2 and β-catenin, respectively, results of the TCF reporter
and cell proliferation studies on COLO-320DM are discussed.
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