The chemotherapeutic CX-5461 primarily targets TOP2B and exhibits selective activity in high-risk neuroblastoma

Author:

Pan Min,Wright William C.,Chapple Richard H.,Zubair Asif,Sandhu Manbir,Batchelder Jake E.,Huddle Brandt C.ORCID,Low Jonathan,Blankenship Kaley B.,Wang YingzheORCID,Gordon Brittney,Archer Payton,Brady Samuel W.ORCID,Natarajan SivaramanORCID,Posgai Matthew J.,Schuetz John,Miller Darcie,Kalathur RaviORCID,Chen Siquan,Connelly Jon PatrickORCID,Babu M. MadanORCID,Dyer Michael A.ORCID,Pruett-Miller Shondra M.ORCID,Freeman Burgess B.,Chen TaoshengORCID,Godley Lucy A.ORCID,Blanchard Scott C.ORCID,Stewart ElizabethORCID,Easton JohnORCID,Geeleher PaulORCID

Abstract

AbstractSurvival in high-risk pediatric neuroblastoma has remained around 50% for the last 20 years, with immunotherapies and targeted therapies having had minimal impact. Here, we identify the small molecule CX-5461 as selectively cytotoxic to high-risk neuroblastoma and synergistic with low picomolar concentrations of topoisomerase I inhibitors in improving survival in vivo in orthotopic patient-derived xenograft neuroblastoma mouse models. CX-5461 recently progressed through phase I clinical trial as a first-in-human inhibitor of RNA-POL I. However, we also use a comprehensive panel of in vitro and in vivo assays to demonstrate that CX-5461 has been mischaracterized and that its primary target at pharmacologically relevant concentrations, is in fact topoisomerase II beta (TOP2B), not RNA-POL I. This is important because existing clinically approved chemotherapeutics have well-documented off-target interactions with TOP2B, which have previously been shown to cause both therapy-induced leukemia and cardiotoxicity—often-fatal adverse events, which can emerge several years after treatment. Thus, while we show that combination therapies involving CX-5461 have promising anti-tumor activity in vivo in neuroblastoma, our identification of TOP2B as the primary target of CX-5461 indicates unexpected safety concerns that should be examined in ongoing phase II clinical trials in adult patients before pursuing clinical studies in children.

Funder

U.S. Department of Health & Human Services | NIH | Office of Extramural Research, National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry

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