2 research outputs found
Evaluation of Protein Kinase cAMP-Activated Catalytic Subunit Alpha as a Therapeutic Target for Fibrolamellar Carcinoma
Background and Aims: Fibrolamellar carcinoma (FLC) is a rare, difficult-to-treat liver cancer primarily affecting pediatric and adolescent patients, and for which precision medicine approaches have historically not been possible. The DNAJB1-PRKACA gene fusion was identified as a driver of FLC pathogenesis. We aimed to assess whether FLC tumors maintain dependency on this gene fusion and determine if PRKACA is a viable therapeutic target. Methods: FLC patient-derived xenograft (PDX) shRNA cell lines were implanted subcutaneously into female NOD-SCID mice and tumors were allowed to develop prior to randomization to doxycycline (to induce knockdown) or control groups. Tumor development was assessed every 2 days. To assess the effect of treatment with novel selective PRKACA small molecule kinase inhibitors, BLU0588 and BLU2864, FLC PDX tumor cells were implanted subcutaneously into NOD-SCID mice and tumors allowed to develop. Mice were randomized to treatment (BLU0588 and BLU2864, orally, once daily) or control groups and tumor size determined as previously. Results: Knockdown of DNAJB1-PRKACA reversed a FLC-specific gene signature and reduced PDX tumor growth in mice compared to the control group. Furthermore, FLC PDX tumor growth was significantly reduced with BLU0588 and BLU2864 treatment vs control (PĀ = .003 and PĀ = .0005, respectively). Conclusion: We demonstrated, using an inducible knockdown and small molecule approaches, that FLC PDX tumors were dependent upon DNAJB1-PRKACA fusion activity. In addition, this study serves as a proof-of-concept that PRKACA is a viable therapeutic target for FLC and warrants further investigation
Discovery of a Selective Phosphoinositide-3-Kinase (PI3K)āĪ³ Inhibitor (IPI-549) as an Immuno-Oncology Clinical Candidate
Optimization of isoquinolinone
PI3K inhibitors led to the discovery
of a potent inhibitor of PI3K-Ī³ (<b>26</b> or IPI-549)
with >100-fold selectivity over other lipid and protein kinases.
IPI-549
demonstrates favorable pharmacokinetic properties and robust inhibition
of PI3K-Ī³ mediated neutrophil migration in vivo and is currently
in Phase 1 clinical evaluation in subjects with advanced solid tumors