News

Pushing MYC inhibition closer to the clinic

20 Mar 2019
Pushing MYC inhibition closer to the clinic

Cutting-edge sequencing technology has revolutionised cancer diagnosis and since identified several so-called cancer driver genomic aberrations.

This has led to the development of an extensive and powerful arsenal of anti-cancer therapies that is progressively extending cancer survival rates and reducing mortality from this disease.

However, many patients unfortunately become resistant to treatments and suffer disease recurrence.

The MYC oncogene is a transcription factor implicated in multiple biological processes including cell proliferation, metabolism and apoptosis and is a central node of several altered pathways in cancer.

Found deregulated in most, if not all, tumour types, aberrantly high activity of MYC correlates with aggressiveness of disease.

However, up until now, attempts aimed at inhibiting MYC have fallen short.

For more than twenty years, Laura Soucek, Principal Investigator of the Vall d'Hebron Institute of Oncology's (VHIO) Mouse Models of Cancer Therapies and ICREA Professor, has centred her research on the ambitious route towards combating resistance to current therapies and disease progression by clinically inhibiting MYC.

Since her arrival at VHIO, her research using Omomyc-expressing transgenic mice has revealed the anti-cancer activity against several tumour types, including pancreatic cancer and glioblastoma, with mild, manageable and reversible side effects.

These preclinical successes subsequently led to the creation of VHIO born spin-off Peptomyc S.L. in 2014, co-founded by Laura and Marie-Eve Beaulieu, Chief-Scientific-Officer and former postdoctoral researcher of her group.

Published online in Science Translational Medicine, findings first-authored by Marie-Eve Beaulieu evidence the Omomyc mini-protein as the first efficient and tolerable MYC inhibitor for the treatment of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) - one of the most difficult-to-treat cancers for both women and men.

30 percent of these tumours present MYC amplification, while the rest usually display other alterations in intracellular pathways that ultimately lead to deregulated MYC activity.

In this present study, Laura's team show that the mini-protein is active against diverse mutational profiles that are usually resistant to current therapies.

Laura Soucek, last and corresponding author of this study, explains, "NSCLC accounted for around two million cancer-related deaths worldwide in 2018 because of a lack of effective therapies. For instance, patients with KRAS-mutant NSCLC are among the most resistant to standard therapies, but we have shown that Omomyc is effective in treating them too. In fact, we have not yet detected any genomic alteration that impairs Omomyc activity.

For the very first time the authors establish that the Omomyc mini-protein can be purified and administered in vivo, rapidly reaching the tumour site.

Results show that it successfully inhibits its target, leads to reduced tumour grade and promotes regression of existing disease.

They also demonstrate that Omomyc localises in the lungs within the first 30 minutes after intranasal administration, where it is predominantly restrained within the tumours and persists inside the nuclei of tumour cells 24h post-administration.

These findings ring in this promising therapy as new anti-cancer weaponry for the treatment of non-small cell lung cancer, and the first ever viable inhibitor of Myc.

"Intranasal administration was the first proof-of-concept that Omomyc could be delivered as a drug as opposed to being used as gene therapy.

However, this means of administration was limited to primary lung tumours but not to the metastases or other primary ones, that is why it was important for us to show that the mini-protein could also be administered systemically," observes Marie-Eve Beaulieu.

Thanks to Marie-Eve's particular expertise in peptide design and production, the team have succeeded in scaling up the purification process of the mini-protein and re-assessed its therapeutic activity via intravenous administration.

Its systemic delivery unleashes the anti-cancer potential of Omomyc and extends its application to the treatment of other tumours and metastases.

Not only did this therapy impair tumour growth in subcutaneous NSCLC xenografts in mice, but also synergised with current standard treatments including paclitaxel.

It was also well-tolerated with no sign of the frequently observed side effects due to drug-drug interactions.

Mechanistically, the researchers report that the Omomyc mini-protein harbours cell-penetrating features that enable its internalisation into the nuclei and impede the binding of MYC to gene promoters throughout the genome.

It specifically downregulates MYC transcriptional programs and avoids undesired activity on other proteins and adverse events in mice.

"Our approach differs completely to other previous attempts aimed at MYC inhibition. This Omomyc mini-protein is large enough to accurately fold and adapt to MYC's disordered structure, which determines the specificity of inhibition. But, at the same time, it is small enough to penetrate tumor cells and nuclei in order to reach its target," adds Marie-Eve.

Additionally, the researchers have revealed some of the several biologic uptake pathways that are implicated in this process.

"We have discovered that one of the main entrance mechanisms of Omomyc is macropinocytosis, which is a cell mechanism to capture nutrients from the microenvironment. It appears that Omomyc hijacks this process and behaves as a 'Trojan Horse' to penetrate the tumour cell and kill it," says Laura.

Finally, as has been advanced in this publication, the authors suggest that Omomyc may attack tumours not only through the blocking of proliferation and the induction of apoptosis, but also by triggering an immune response.

The inhibitor can alter the profile of molecules released by cancer to trick the immune system, and may increase the infiltration of T lymphocytes into the tumour.

This is particularly relevant as immunotherapy is showing increasing promise in the treatment of several tumour types, but not all.

The capacity of Omomyc to recruit immune cells at the tumour site, 'spoilered' in this study, indicates that it could also synergise and re-sensitise resistant tumours to immune-based therapies.

This translational study represents an important forward step in driving the Omomyc mini-protein closer to the clinic.

"This work will hopefully help propel our Omomyc mini-protein as a powerful therapy to treat a wide range of tumour types with distinct mutational profiles," concludes Laura.

Source: VHIO