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Meeting Report |
1 Genomics Institute of the Novartis Foundation and The Scripps Research Institute; 2 Salk Institute for Biological Studies, San Diego, California; and 3 Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, Massachusetts
Requests for reprints: Claudio A.P. Joazeiro, Genomics Institute of the Novartis Foundation, 10675 John J. Hopkins Drive, San Diego, CA 92121. Phone: 858-812-1712; E-mail: cjoazeiro{at}hotmail.com.
| Abstract |
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| The Proteasome, Bortezomib, and Multiple Myeloma |
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Small-molecule proteasome inhibitors are usually peptidomimetics whose COOH-terminal reactive groups take advantage of the unique catalytic mechanism of proteasome subunits (involving NH2-terminal threonine nucleophiles) to achieve specificity (1). For example, the commonly used research reagent, MG-132 (Z-Leu-Leu-Leu-al), is a peptide aldehyde that reversibly inhibits the chymotryptic-like site of the proteasome but can also inhibit lysosomal cathepsins at higher concentrations. Other classes of inhibitors can achieve greater specificity and potency toward the proteasome, such as peptide boronates, lactacystin and epoxomicin, and thus have become the choice for development into drugs.
The first of these proteasome inhibitors to reach the clinic was the dipeptide boronate of Millennium Pharmaceuticals (Cambridge, MA), bortezomib, a slowly reversible inhibitor of the chymotryptic site. David Schenkein (Millennium Pharmaceuticals) started the session "Clinical and Preclinical Studies Targeting the Ubiquitin-Proteasome System," chaired by Alfred Goldberg (Department of Cell Biology, Harvard Medical School), by presenting the history of development of bortezomib. The drug candidate, which in preclinical studies had shown significant activity against a mouse xenograft model of human multiple myeloma, was initially evaluated for inhibition of the degradation of I
B-
. The hope was to prevent activation of nuclear factor-
B in tumor cells, with the rationale that this would lead to inhibition of the related intrinsic drug resistance, of expression of adhesion molecules for bone marrow residency, and of expression and secretion of the cytokines required for multiple myeloma growth in the bone marrow milieu. (More recent studies are suggesting that multiple factors probably contribute to therapeutic effects of bortezomib.) Durable responses and clinical benefit in phase II trials in relapsed refractory multiple myeloma led to Food and Drug Administration approval of bortezomib, which was then extended to relapsed multiple myeloma based on a phase III trial showing prolonged time to progression compared with conventional therapy.
Inhibition of the growth of myeloma cells isolated from patients required
170 times lower drug concentrations than for normal peripheral blood mononuclear cells. The relative insensitivity of normal cells to bortezomib is also reflected in the clinic; maximum tolerated dose studies revealed that one can achieve
80% inhibition of the chymotryptic site in patient blood leukocytes using a drug concentration at which patients experience little toxicity relative to standard chemotherapy. This low toxicity is still surprising to many researchers in the field, given the major role of the ubiquitin-proteasome system (UPS) in many cellular processes in all cell types, including roles in eliminating misfolded and aggregating proteins and in degrading unstable proteins that function as proapoptotic regulators, cell cycle regulators, or transcription factors. For example, at the AACR meeting, Goldberg discussed a possible explanation; his group showed that the selective inhibition of the chymotryptic site to a degree compared with that seen with bortezomib-treated patients led to <50% decrease in the breakdown of a model substrate in vitro and had little effect on overall protein degradation in cultured cells (see also ref. 3). Thus, limited inhibition of protein degradation may account for the unexpectedly lower toxicity of bortezomib toward nontumor cells.
| New Clinical Studies and Candidate Second-Generation Drugs |
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As reported during the conference, combination therapies play important roles in the new bortezomib trials as well. Importantly, the drug can be used in combination to sensitize or overcome resistance to DNA-damaging agents (Schenkein); together with the Hsp90 inhibitor 17-AAG, bortezomib led to responses even in patients with bortezomib-refractory multiple myeloma (Anderson); lenalidomide (a thalidomide analogue) is another new drug with shown activity in relapsed and refractory multiple myeloma, presumably acting through a different target. Consistent with the previous observation that lenalidomide and bortezomib synergize in promoting apoptosis in tissue culture, phase I trials with multiple myeloma show that these drugs can be combined at active doses, thus far exhibiting promising activity (Schenkein). Because the choice of drugs for combination therapies remains largely an empirical process, the striking results with bortezomib certainly argue for continued investments on studies aiming at building an underlying scientific basis for this clinical practice.
For reasons that remain unclear, initial studies with solid tumors, including colon cancer, have not been promising. There are, however, early signs of activity in a subset of patients with nonsmall cell lung cancer (Schenkein). Following the talks, there was discussion of recent data from others suggesting that bortezomib coupled with endoplasmic reticulum stress-mediated apoptosis or with aggresome inhibition may also have efficacy in pancreatic carcinoma (see also refs. 4, 5).
Some patients with advanced multiple myeloma experience peripheral neuropathy (6), which may have discouraged new drug discovery activities in this class, at least to some extent, due to such liabilities. It is exciting that phase I trials are now suggesting that this side effect may be relieved in the bortezomib-lenalinomide combined therapy (Schenkein and Anderson). The question that remains to be answered is whether neuropathy results from proteasome inhibition or whether it is due to an off-target effect. Betting on the latter possibility, some small companies have pursued the development of new types of antiproteasome drugs with alternative chemistries.
The preclinical development of two such novel proteasome inhibitors was presented at the meeting (Fig. 1 ). Anderson talked about salinosporamide A (NPI-0052; Nereus Pharmaceuticals, San Diego, CA) which, unlike bortezomib, is orally available. This natural product derivative resembles lactacystin and irreversibly targets all three active sites (7, 8). Despite such seeming promiscuity, NPI-0052 did not target other proteases tested, possibly due to chemical specificity toward the unique catalytic mechanism of the proteasome. Francesco Parlati presented PR-171 (Proteolix, South San Francisco, CA), an irreversible inhibitor of the chymotryptic site synthetically derived from epoxomycin, the most selective type of proteasome inhibitor known. Both NPI-0052 and PR-171 induced apoptosis in multiple myeloma cells resistant to bortezomib and to other therapies and showed effectiveness in animal models. As a result, investigational new drug applications for both drugs have been successfully filed and both are undergoing early phase clinical trials in multiple myeloma. Whether these compounds ultimately exhibit greater therapeutic indices than bortezomib, they represent critical new tools for understanding how factors like the degree of inhibition of the three proteolytic sites, reversibility, and overall protein breakdown translate into clinical response and toxicity.
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| Perspectives |
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Given the explosion of activities in the UPS field, in both basic and applied research, it is not unreasonable to expect that, like for protein kinases a decade or so ago, much more excitement is yet to come from targeting protein degradation for drug discovery and development.
| Acknowledgments |
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Received 6/ 2/06. Accepted 6/22/06.
| References |
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