4.7 Article

An MDM2 degrader for treatment of acute leukemias

Journal

LEUKEMIA
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41375-022-01735-6

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health SIG [1S10OD025132, 1S10OD028504]

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In acute myeloid leukemia (AML), the excessive expression of MDM2 reduces the tumor suppressor activity of p53. Researchers have developed a PROTAC called MS3227 that can degrade MDM2 and activate p53, resulting in the inhibition of leukemia cell growth. MS3227 also enhances the activity of other anti-leukemic agents.
In acute myeloid leukemia (AML), p53 tumor suppressor activity can be reduced due to enhanced expression of MDM2 which promotes the degradation of p53. In TP53 wild-type malignancies, therapy with small molecule antagonists of MDM2 results in antileukemic activity. Current treatment strategies, however, have been limited by poor tolerability and incomplete clinical activity. We have developed a proteolysis-targeting chimera (PROTAC) MS3227 that targets MDM2 by recruiting the E3 ligase Von Hippel-Lindau, resulting in proteasome-dependent degradation of MDM2. In WT TP53 leukemia cell lines, MS3227 led to activation of p53 targets p21, PUMA, and MDM2 and resulted in cell-cycle arrest, apoptosis, and decreased viability. The catalytic PROTAC MS3227 led to more potent activation when compared to a stoichiometric inhibitor, in part by dampening the negative feedback mechanism in the p53 - MDM2 circuit. The effectiveness of MS3227 was also observed in primary patient specimens with selectivity towards leukemic blasts. The addition of MS3227 enhanced the activity of other anti-leukemic agents including azacytidine, cytarabine, and venetoclax. In particular, MS3227 treatment was shown to downregulate MCL-1, a known mediator of resistance to venetoclax. A PROTAC-based approach may provide a means of improving MDM2 inhibition to gain greater therapeutic potential in AML.

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