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Study identifies potential treatment target for IDH1-mutant cancers

15 Dec 2015
Study identifies potential treatment target for IDH1-mutant cancers

A Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH)-based research team has identified a potential new treatment target for tumours - including a significant percentage of malignant brain tumours - driven by mutations in an important metabolic enzyme.

In their report in Cancer Cell, the investigators describe finding, in cellular and animal models, that tumours characterised by IDH1 mutations are greatly susceptible to depletion of NAD , a critical metabolic cofactor.

"Targeting the basic changes in cancer metabolism can offer new treatment approaches for patients. Our finding that IDH1-mutant cancer cells are dependent on NAD supports the proposal that medications that can decrease levels of this metabolite, which are in development, have the potential to specifically treat these cancers," says Daniel Cahill, MD, PhD, of the Pappas Center for Neuro-Oncology in the MGH Cancer Center and the MGH Department of Neurosurgery, co-senior author of the Cancer Cell paper.

IDH1 and a related enzyme called IDH2 play essential roles in cellular metabolism, including the processes by which cells convert glucose and other nutrients into the molecule ATP, providing the energy needed for cellular survival.

In 2008 it was discovered that IDH1 mutations are involved in several types of cancers.

The gene is mutated in around 20 percent of adult gliomas, particularly in tumours appearing in young adult patients, in more than 10 percent of acute myeloid leukaemia and in a smaller percentage of other cancers.

One clear result of IDH1 mutation is a 100-fold elevation in levels of the metabolite 2-HG, which is known to mediate several properties that lead to tumour development, and drugs that decrease levels of 2-HG are currently under development.

To find additional ways of blocking the mutation's effects, the MGH-based team used an agent that inhibits the activity of the mutated enzyme to look into whether other metabolic pathways might be altered in IDH1-mutant cells.

They were surprised to find that, while inhibiting the activity of the mutated enzyme in tumour cells reduced 2-HG levels, in many cases that reduction did not halt cell growth.

Detailed metabolic profiling of IDH1-mutant cells revealed that inhibiting the mutated enzyme greatly increased levels of NAD , a cofactor that plays a role in several cellular energy processes.

Additional experiments found that depletion of NAD induced the death of IDH1-mutant tumour cells and inhibited tumour growth in an animal model of glioma.

"Accumulation of excess 2-HG is known to drive several changes leading to tumour development, but our results indicate that simply depleting 2-HG levels was not sufficient to halt the growth of several types of later-stage IDH1-mutant tumours," says co-author Hiroaki Wakimoto, MD, PhD, director of the Brain Tumor Stem Cell Laboratory in the MGH Cancer Center and the MGH Department of Neurosurgery.

"In addition, we found that mutant IDH1 reduces expression of an enzyme that maintains NAD levels, rendering IDH1-mutant tumour cells highly sensitive to direct NAD depletion. Several drugs that inhibit the synthesis of NAD are already in clinical trials, and these agents may prove useful for patients with IDH-mutant cancers. While we primarily focused on IDH1-mutant gliomas, we also found evidence that NAD inhibition could slow the growth of other types of cancer with this mutation."

SourceMassachusetts General Hospital