Affiliation:
1. Apogee Biotechnology Corporation, 1214 Research Blvd, Suite 2015, Hummelstown, PA 17036, USA
Abstract
Fibrosis is a chronic pathology resulting from excessive deposition of extracellular matrix components that leads to the loss of tissue function. Pulmonary fibrosis can follow a variety of diverse insults including ischemia, respiratory infection, or exposure to ionizing radiation. Consequently, treatments that attenuate the development of debilitating fibrosis are in desperate need across a range of conditions. Sphingolipid metabolism is a critical regulator of cell proliferation, apoptosis, autophagy, and pathologic inflammation, processes that are all involved in fibrosis. Opaganib (formerly ABC294640) is the first-in-class investigational drug targeting sphingolipid metabolism for the treatment of cancer and inflammatory diseases. Opaganib inhibits key enzymes in sphingolipid metabolism, including sphingosine kinase-2 and dihydroceramide desaturase, thereby reducing inflammation and promoting autophagy. Herein, we demonstrate in mouse models of lung damage following exposure to ionizing radiation that opaganib significantly improved long-term survival associated with reduced lung fibrosis, suppression of granulocyte infiltration, and reduced expression of IL-6 and TNFα at 180 days after radiation. These data further demonstrate that sphingolipid metabolism is a critical regulator of fibrogenesis, and specifically show that opaganib suppresses radiation-induced pulmonary inflammation and fibrosis. Because opaganib has demonstrated an excellent safety profile during clinical testing in other diseases (cancer and COVID-19), the present studies support additional clinical trials with this drug in patients at risk for pulmonary fibrosis.
Funder
Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority
US Department of Defense
National Cancer Institute
Reference56 articles.
1. Fibrosis: From mechanisms to medicines;Henderson;Nature,2020
2. Role of sphingosine 1-phosphate signalling in tissue fibrosis;Donati;Cell. Signal.,2021
3. Robert, S., Gicquel, T., Bodin, A., Lagente, V., and Boichot, E. (2016). Characterization of the MMP/TIMP Imbalance and Collagen Production Induced by IL-1beta or TNF-alpha Release from Human Hepatic Stellate Cells. PLoS ONE, 11.
4. Mechanisms of fibrosis: Therapeutic translation for fibrotic disease;Wynn;Nat. Med.,2012
5. Targeting Sphingosine Kinases for the Treatment of Cancer;Lewis;Adv. Cancer Res.,2018