Non-oncology drugs are a source of previously unappreciated anti-cancer activity

Author:

Corsello Steven M.ORCID,Nagari Rohith T.,Spangler Ryan D.,Rossen Jordan,Kocak Mustafa,Bryan Jordan G.,Humeidi Ranad,Peck David,Wu Xiaoyun,Tang Andrew A.,Wang Vickie M.,Bender Samantha A.,Lemire Evan,Narayan Rajiv,Montgomery Philip,Ben-David Uri,Chen Yejia,Rees Matthew G.,Lyons Nicholas J.,McFarland James M.,Wong Bang T.,Wang Li,Dumont Nancy,O’Hearn Patrick J.,Stefan Eric,Doench John G.ORCID,Greulich Heidi,Meyerson MatthewORCID,Vazquez Francisca,Subramanian Aravind,Roth Jennifer A.,Bittker Joshua A.,Boehm Jesse S.ORCID,Mader Christopher C.,Tsherniak AviadORCID,Golub Todd R.ORCID

Abstract

ABSTRACTAnti-cancer uses of non-oncology drugs have been found on occasion, but such discoveries have been serendipitous and rare. We sought to create a public resource containing the growth inhibitory activity of 4,518 drugs tested across 578 human cancer cell lines. To accomplish this, we used PRISM, which involves drug treatment of molecularly barcoded cell lines in pools. Relative barcode abundance following treatment thus reflects cell line viability. We found that an unexpectedly large number of non-oncology drugs selectively inhibited subsets of cancer cell lines. Moreover, the killing activity of the majority of these drugs was predictable based on the molecular features of the cell lines. Follow-up of several of these compounds revealed novel mechanisms. For example, compounds that kill by inducing PDE3A-SLFN12 complex formation; vanadium-containing compounds whose killing is dependent on the sulfate transporter SLC26A2; the alcohol dependence drug disulfiram, which kills cells with low expression of metallothioneins; and the anti-inflammatory drug tepoxalin, whose killing is dependent on high expression of the multi-drug resistance gene ABCB1. These results illustrate the potential of the PRISM drug repurposing resource as a starting point for new oncology therapeutic development. The resource is available at https://depmap.org.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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