Abstract PR01: IACS-010759 a novel inhibitor of oxidative phosphorylation advancing into first-in-human studies to exploit metabolic vulnerabilities
2017
Tumor cells normally depend on both glycolysis and oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) to provide the energy and macromolecule building blocks needed to enable continued tumor cell growth. Genetic or epigenetic inactivation of one of these two redundant pathways represents a metabolic vulnerability that should be susceptible to an inhibitor of the other pathway. We have identified multiple contexts where all or a subset of these tumors demonstrate a dependence on mitochondrial OXPHOS, which represents an exciting therapeutic opportunity. Through an extensive medicinal chemistry campaign, IACS-10759 was identified as a potent inhibitor of complex I of oxidative phosphorylation. In isolated mitochondria or permeabilized cells, ATP production or oxygen consumption is inhibited at single digit nM concentrations in the presence of malate/glutamate, but not succinate. More directly, IACS-10759 inhibits the conversion of NADH to NAD+ in an immunoprecipitated complex I assay at low nM concentrations. Importantly, IACS-10759 is orally bioavailable with excellent pharmacokinetics properties in preclinical species, and has an overall profile suitable for clinical development. Our group and others have demonstrated that a variety of tumor types including: AML, plus subsets of lymphoma, breast, melanoma and PDAC are highly dependent on OXPHOS to meet energy and biomass demands. Treatment of multiple cell lines and patient derived xenograft (PDX) models in multiple cancer types with IACS-10759 led to decreased oxygen consumption rate (OCR). IACS-10759 treatment also led to a robust decrease in cell viability and often an increase in apoptosis with EC50 values between 1 nM - 50 nM across multiple lines. In multiple PDX models of primary AML IACS-10759 treatment extends the median survival. Efficacy was paralleled by robust modulation of OCR, aspartate, and p-AMPK levels. Additionally, tumor growth inhibition or regression was also observed in cell line and PDX xenograft models of lymphoma, triple negative breast, melanoma and PDAC treated with IACS-10759, indicating that subsets of several non-AML indications are also dependent on OXPHOS. Mechanistically, extensive metabolic profiling revealed that the response to IACS-10759 was associated with induction of a metabolic imbalances that negatively impacted energy homeostasis, amino acid biosynthesis, and NTP production due to reduced conversion of NADH to NAD+ by complex I, decreased ATP production, TCA cycle flux and nucleotide biosynthesis. As a result of the robust preclinical response in multiple model systems, IACS-10759 has been advanced through IND enabling studies. GLP safety and toxicology have been completed, clinical supplies manufactured, and a Phase I clinical trial in AML will be initiated during the second quarter of 2016. This abstract is also being presented as Poster B35. Citation Format: Philip Jones, M Emilia Di Francesco, Jennifer M. Molina, Marina Protopopova, Madhavi Bandi, Jennifer Bardenhagen, Christopher A. Bristow, Christopher L. Carroll, Ningping Feng, Jason P. Gay, Mary K. Geck Do, Jennifer M. Greer, Marina Konopleva, Zhijun Kang, Gang Liu, Timothy McAfoos, Pietro Morlacchi, Melinda G. Smith, Sonal Fnu, Jay P. Theroff, Giulio Draetta, Giulio Draetta, Carlo Toniatti, Joseph R. Marszalek. IACS-010759 a novel inhibitor of oxidative phosphorylation advancing into first-in-human studies to exploit metabolic vulnerabilities. [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the AACR Precision Medicine Series: Targeting the Vulnerabilities of Cancer; May 16-19, 2016; Miami, FL. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Clin Cancer Res 2017;23(1_Suppl):Abstract nr PR01.
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