Brooks Koepka Withdraws From Presidents Cup Team – The New York Times

Brooks Koepkas knee injury is bad enough that on Wednesday he withdrew from the Presidents Cup three weeks before it begins.

Koepka, the No. 1 player in the world who led all qualifiers for the American team, said the injury he suffered Oct. 18 at the CJ Cup in South Korea has not healed well enough for him to complete Dec. 12-15 at Royal Melbourne in Australia.

United States captain Tiger Woods replaced him with Rickie Fowler.

I consider it to be a high honor to be part of the 2019 team and I regret not being able to compete, Koepka said in a statement. Since my injury in Korea, I have been in constant contact with Tiger and assured him that I was making every effort to be 100% in time for the Presidents Cup in Australia. However, I need more time to heal.

Koepka was coming off a season in which he won three times, including a second straight P.G.A. Championship, and had runner-up finishes in the Masters and United States Open. When he started the new season in October at Las Vegas, he revealed that he had had stem cell treatment on his left patella the day after the Tour Championship because his knee had been bothering him over the last five months of the season.

Two weeks later, he was walking down a slope off the tee at the par-5 third hole in the second round of the CJ Cup when his right foot hit a wet piece of concrete and he landed hard on his left knee for support. He shot 75 and withdrew after the round, returning to Florida for treatment.

Koepka has not spoken publicly about the nature of the injury. He was in touch with Woods, who had been contemplating alternative plans.

Brooks and I talked, and hes disappointed that he wont be able to compete, Woods said. I told him to get well soon, and that were sorry he wont be with us in Australia. He would clearly be an asset both on the course and in the team room.

Woods, who used one of his four captains picks on himself after winning in Japan, originally left Fowler off the team and said it was the hardest phone call he made when telling prospective players he was not taking them.

Fowler has played on the last two Presidents Cup teams, going 2-0-1 in team play with Justin Thomas at Liberty National in 2017.

When I heard Brooks wasnt going to be ready to play, I was bummed for him and the team, Fowler said. Then I got a call from both Brooks and Tiger. I was humbled and excited to be given the chance. To be picked by Tiger to compete with him and the rest of the team is very special. It is impossible to replace the worlds No. 1, but I can assure my teammates and American golf fans that I will be prepared and ready to do my part to bring home the Presidents Cup.

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Brooks Koepka Withdraws From Presidents Cup Team - The New York Times

Rational discovery of antimetastatic agents targeting the intrinsically disordered region of MBD2 – Science Advances

Abstract

Although intrinsically disordered protein regions (IDPRs) are commonly engaged in promiscuous protein-protein interactions (PPIs), using them as drug targets is challenging due to their extreme structural flexibility. We report a rational discovery of inhibitors targeting an IDPR of MBD2 that undergoes disorder-to-order transition upon PPI and is critical for the regulation of the Mi-2/NuRD chromatin remodeling complex (CRC). Computational biology was essential for identifying target site, searching for promising leads, and assessing their binding feasibility and off-target probability. Molecular action of selected leads inhibiting the targeted PPI of MBD2 was validated in vitro and in cell, followed by confirming their inhibitory effects on the epithelial-mesenchymal transition of various cancer cells. Identified lead compounds appeared to potently inhibit cancer metastasis in a murine xenograft tumor model. These results constitute a pioneering example of rationally discovered IDPR-targeting agents and suggest Mi-2/NuRD CRC and/or MBD2 as a promising target for treating cancer metastasis.

Although at least 650,000 protein-protein interactions (PPIs) might occur in humans, only one PPI inhibitor has been approved for clinical use to treat cancers (1), suggesting that the field of PPI inhibitors remains largely unexplored. A variety of proteins and their PPIs have emerged as prospective drug targets to treat tumors because of the extreme heterogeneity and plasticity of cancer (2, 3). Ligands with the potential of binding to a specific site of a target protein with known structure can be efficiently identified by virtual screening. However, the structural plasticity of target proteins usually works against yielding an effective drug candidate. For example, selected compound treatment of cells/organisms often fails to elicit the anticipated effects due to in vivo structural alterations of the target protein caused by various posttranslational modifications (PTMs) and/or unanticipated interactions of the compound and/or its target protein with other molecules (4, 5). Furthermore, many critical proteins regulating various biological processes do not have unique structures as a whole or in some functionally important regions (6, 7). Structures of these intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs) or IDP regions (IDPRs) are extremely dynamic, depending on the environment, and might change during function (4, 8). Many signaling IDPs/IDPRs undergo characteristic disorder-to-order transitions (DOTs) upon interactions with specific binding partners and/or through PTMs (9, 10). Targeting the IDPs/IDPRs capable of DOT is generally considered an attractive but challenging task for developing anti-PPI inhibitors. In this regard, a recently identified small-molecule compound, 10058-F4, serves as a pioneering success of anti-PPI inhibitor that binds to an IDPR of c-Myc undergoing a DOT upon binding to its partner Max (11, 12). 10058-F4 was discovered by a random screening using a yeast two-hybrid system (11), followed by experimental identification of its specific binding site (residues 402 to 412 of c-Myc) as an IDPR. Drug leads like 10058-F4 targeting IDPs/IDPRs cannot be found by conventional computational methods that rely on fixed conformations, such as crystallographic structures of target proteins. No computer-aided drug discovery platform is currently available for the systematic exploration of IDPRs as potential drug-target sites (3).

To fill this gap, we developed a novel platform for the discovery of drug leads based on molecular docking and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of the DOT-associated IDPRs of target proteins. Figure 1A describes this protocol. First, intrinsic disorder predispositions of drug-target proteins are analyzed, and potential disorder-based binding regions that can undergo DOTs are evaluated. A search of the protein structure database [Protein Data Bank (PDB)] is also performed to identify known PPIs and DOTs. Once the potential drug-target sites (DOT-based PPI regions) are determined, the corresponding structures retrieved from the PDB are used for molecular docking with druggable compounds from the ZINC compound library (13). Together with the docking scores, off-target probabilities assessed by the similarity ensemble approach (SEA) (1416) analysis are also considered for selection of lead compounds from the molecular-docked hit compounds. Last, prospected candidate compounds are suggested via MD simulations that evaluate the mode and efficiency of the compound binding.

(A) Flow chart describing the computational process of ligand discovery. (B) Evaluation of the intrinsic disorder propensity of MBD2 (left) and c-Myc (right); disorder scores 1 and 0 mean fully disordered and fully ordered residues, respectively. Pink bars show positions of the determined DOT sites embedded in residues 360 to 393 for MBD2 and 395 to 430 for c-Myc. (C) Chemical structures of the top 10 compounds showing the most favorable binding to the MBD2 target site in the molecular docking screening of ZINC chemical library. (D) Representative structures of protein-ligand complexes obtained from the molecular docking results (original data file 1 for PDB coordinates): 10058-F4:c-Myc402 (top; control experiment), ABA:MBD2369 (middle), and APC:MBD2369 (bottom).

The feasibility of the proposed approach was validated in this study by targeting an IDPR of MBD2 that undergoes a DOT upon association with its binding partner p66 for the integration of the Mi-2/NuRD chromatin remodeling complex (CRC). The integrated Mi-2/NuRD CRC includes one CHD (either CHD3 or CHD4), one HDAC (HDAC1 or HDAC2), two DOC1, three MTA (MTA1, MTA2, and MTA3), six RbAp46/48, two p66 (p66 or p66), and one MBD (MBD2 or MBD3) molecules (17, 18), where the molecular interaction of MBD2 with p66 critically mediates the proper assembly of CRC (17, 19). This CRC performs an important epigenetic function in normal development and differentiation by suppressing gene expression by binding directly to the DNA methylation sites and to the DNA methyltransferases (20, 21).

CRC also contributes to the development of human diseases, including cancer (22, 23); for example, the epigenetic regulation by Mi-2/NuRD CRC includes multiple tumor suppressor genes (23, 24), and several CRC components, including MBD2, were also observed to be oncogenic and/or closely correlated with the aggressiveness of several cancers (23, 25, 26). In particular, the function of Mi-2/NuRD CRC is known to be associated with the cellular process of epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT; the conversion of adhesive epithelial cells into migratory, invasive mesenchymal cells) that drives wound healing and cell migration and invasion (27, 28). In cancer, EMT necessarily mediates the metastasis of cancers and thus also enables carcinoma cells to acquire cancer stem cell (CSC) properties, malignancy-associated traits, and drug resistance (2931). Given that the metastasis is responsible for more than 90% of contemporary cancer deaths and yet no marketed antimetastatic drug is currently available (32), developing these drugs to target the cancer spreading is an essential and urgent task for oncological therapy. In this context, functional inhibition of CRC or modulation of its individual components might serve as a novel strategy for effective anticancer therapy to prevent the progression of cancer to metastatic stage. In particular, it has been observed that down-regulation of MBD2 and/or p66, which triggered derepression of epithelial regulators via epigenetic reprogramming of the Mi-2/NuRD CRC into the MBD2-free or disentangled CRC, resulted in promoted epithelial differentiation and loss of tumor-initiating ability. Therefore, targeting MBD2 specifically at its IDPR would be a promising approach to the development of antimetastatic agents by inhibiting its DOT-based PPI with p66 that is essential for the integration of CRC and thus for its critical function in EMT. In addition, no noticeable adverse effects displayed by MBD2 inhibitors can be expected from the fact that down-regulation of MBD2 expression is essential for normal cell differentiation (33), and yet, MBD2 knockout (MBD2/) mice exhibit normal survival and reproduction (34).

Hence, in this study, the MBD2 IDPR and its DOT-based interaction with p66 for the CRC integration were selected as a highly promising target system to evaluate the efficiency of our platform for rational drug discovery. Using this novel approach, we identified two small-molecule compounds capable of inhibiting the PPI of MBD2 and thereby efficiently suppressing the cancer metastatic potentials. In vivo efficacy of both leads in inhibiting cancer metastasis was also evident in a murine xenograft tumor model. Therefore, our novel method renders IDPRs available for rational discovery of anticancer drugs targeting DOT-based PPIs. In particular, the identified compounds provide a basis for the development of previously unidentified inhibitors capable of controlling metastasis of various carcinomas.

As our study was inspired by the discovery of 10058-F4, which binds to the c-Myc IDPR to inhibit its DOT for interaction with Max (11, 12), we compared the PPI site of MBD2 with that of c-Myc using our computational platform. Sequence analysis (see fig. S1 for sequence and structure information) revealed that disorder profiles of the PPI site of MBD2 (residues 360 to 393 for p66 interaction) (17, 35) closely resembled that of c-Myc (residues 400 to 434 for Max interaction) (36, 37) (Fig. 1B), characterized by a positive slope in its disorder profile. As both MBD2 and c-Myc are folded in complexes with their cognate partners (p66 and Max, respectively) (17, 35, 37), this analysis suggests that the PPI sites of MBD2 and c-Myc could undergo a similar type of DOT upon complex formation.

Subsequently, a nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) ensemble structure of MBD2360393 in its complex with p66138178 (PDB ID: 2L2L) was retrieved, and the lowest-energy conformation of the ensemble was extracted for molecular docking analysis using the four residues (D366, I369, V376, and L383) of MBD2360393 engaged in the coiled-coil interaction, with p66 (35) as the initial target site in the molecular docking. From the molecular dockingbased virtual screening of 2 106 chemical compounds in the ZINC library, 10 promising compounds (compounds #1 to #10 in Fig. 1C) capable of interaction with MBD2 at the designated target site were selected. As a control, the Y402-targeted molecular docking of 10058-F4 to c-Myc395430 (Fig. 1D; note that the key residue for the c-Myc interaction with 10058-F4 is Y402) (35) was compared with the MBD2360393 docking of the 10 selected hit compounds (table S1). The MBD2369-targeted docking of two compounds {compounds #2 and #3 in Fig. 1D named herein ABA [2-amino-N-(2,3-dihydro-benzo[1,4]dioxin-2-ylmethyl)-acetamide] and APC [3-(2-amino-acetylamino)-pyrrolidine-1-carboxylic acid tert-butyl ester], respectively} was found as the most favorable. In ABA:MBD2369 and APC:MBD2369 dockings, these compounds formed three intermolecular hydrogen bonds and had relatively low DOCK scores (35.2 and 33.3 kcal mol1, respectively) of the DOCK binding. These binding features could be compared favorably with those of the 10058-F4:c-Myc402 docking, which showed the DOCK score of 6.77 kcal mol1 and just one intermolecular hydrogen bond (table S1).

Concerning the potential side effects of the selected hit compounds, their off-target probabilities were assessed by the SEA analysis (14, 16), which has served as an eminent bioinformatics resource aiding in target identification for drug development by profiling multiple protein targets of chemical compounds as probes (15). For this analysis, the c-Myc inhibitor 10058-F4 and two anticancer drugs, imatinib (Gleevec) and sorafenib (Nexavar), were also compared as controls, and 2060 human proteins in the database were searched as potential targets. Given that a significant binding is feasible when both the Max Tc value more than 0.5 and E value lower than 1010 are relevant, no suggestible off-target was predicted for 7 of the 10 hit compounds including both ABA and APC, whereas four proteins were found as the probable 10058-F4 targets (Fig. 2A and table S2). Two of the other compounds also showed a small number of putative off-target proteins (six and two proteins for compounds #4 and #10, respectively), whereas 35 and 26 targets were suggested for imatinib and sorafenib, respectively (fig. S2A and table S2). Therefore, we screened nine compounds with low off-target probability for cellular activity dysregulating MBD2. In particular, the cell migration assay was used for this preliminary test of the compounds on the basis of the previous observation that knockdown of MBD2 in cancer cell lines resulted in decreased migration of the cells. The result implicated most of the hit compounds in actual suppression of the migration of breast adenocarcinoma MDA-MB-231 (LM1) and colorectal carcinoma HCT116 cells (Fig. 2B and fig. S2B). In particular, ABA (compound #2) and APC (compound #3), which accomplished the most favorable target binding in the aforementioned molecular docking experiments, also showed the least MI50 (concentration for half-inhibition of cell migration) values. Therefore, these two molecules were selected as lead compounds for subsequent evaluation in detail.

(A) Computational analysis for off-target probabilities of the 10058-F4 (control experiment) and two selected lead compounds (ABA and APC). Max Tc and E value of the predicted binding are plotted for the n (number of potential targets predicted) off-target candidates yielded from SEA using 2060 human proteins in the database. See fig. S2 for the other hit compounds. (B) Cell migration inhibition by the hit compounds. The LM1 and HCT116 cancer cells were fixed and stained after 48 hours of Transwell migration in the presence of indicated concentrations of individual compounds, followed by counting the number of migrated cells (n = 2) to yield MI50 value.

To assess target-binding feasibility and mode of binding of the two selected leads, we conducted MD simulation using the structures resulting from the ABA:MBD2369, APC:MBD2369, and 10058-F4:c-Myc402 docking (Fig. 1D) as starting points. In 50-ns MD trajectories, the number of the compound-protein contacts (Fig. 3A) and the compound-protein interaction energies (fig. S3A) over time were steady for 10058-F4:c-Myc402 but showed noticeable fluctuations for ABA:MBD2369 and APC:MBD2369, particularly during the first half of the simulation period, suggesting that the binding of ABA or APC to MBD2360393 might be less persistent than the 10058-F4c-Myc395430 interaction. However, heatmaps representing intermolecular contacts for individual residues (Fig. 3B) indicated frequent contacts of the ABA/APCMBD2360393 interaction comparable to that of the 10058-F4c-Myc395430 interaction. In particular, the highest contact density value at the most contacted residue (D368 contact) in the ABA:MBD2369 trajectory was higher than that (L404 contact) in the 10058-F4:c-Myc402 trajectory, suggesting stronger binding. Next, MD simulations for the ligand:MBD2360393 complex were extended to include D366-, V376-, and L383-targeted docking (Fig. 3C). Consistent with the ABA:MBD2369 trajectory, D368 was the most contacted residue in the heatmaps for heavy atom contacts of the ABA:MBD2376 trajectory, although no preferential contact was found in the other ABA:MBD2360393 trajectories and in the APC:MBD2360393 MD simulation sets. Collectively, the MD simulation indicated that the actual binding of ABA and APC to MBD2360393 would be as promising as the 10058-F4 binding to c-Myc395430, although detailed interaction modes can be different between the two compounds. Therefore, it was subsequently examined whether the targeted binding of the compounds to MBD2 would influence specific PPI of the protein.

(A) Time-course alterations of the number of intermolecular contacts within 3 cutoff in MD simulations. (B) Heatmap describing the number of simulated compound-protein contacts during 50-ns trajectory for individual residues. Each value of a number of contacts was normalized by dividing it by the total number of contacts in each simulation. The already-known critical residues for PPI are shown in darker red. (C) Heatmap of the intermolecular heavy atom contacts between the lead compounds and target proteins during 50-ns trajectory. Number of contacts was normalized by the total number of contacts in each simulation. MBD2 N-terminal two residues, G and S, were from the NMR structure (PDB ID: 2L2L). MBD2 sequence starts from K360, after G, and S.

It has been suggested that 10058-F4 evokes a local conformational change (36) or conformational equilibrium shift (38, 39) of the c-Myc IDPR at its binding sites, and this small but significant alteration is critically involved in the functional inhibition of the DOT-mediated PPI of c-Myc with Max. Detailed inspection of the MD simulation results suggested that the MBD2 IDPR could also undergo a local conformational perturbation upon the binding of ABA and APC. For instance, in the ABA:MBD2369 and APC:MBD2369 trajectories, both and backbone torsion angles of the most contacted residue (D368) in the compound-contacting states were significantly (t test, P < 0.05) different from those in the noncontacting states (fig. S3B). The compound-bound conformation also appeared to be different between ABA and APC, as the D368 angles in the compound-contacting states were significantly different in between ABA:MBD2369 and APC:MBD2369 trajectories, although angle differences were not significant (t test, P = 0.574). Therefore, to further analyze the possible conformational perturbation, we compared the compound-bound ABA:MBD2369 and APC:MBD2369 trajectories with the apo-MBD2 and p66-MBD2 trajectories (fig. S3C). The backbone root mean square fluctuation values of individual residues (fig. S3D) showed that apo-MBD2 underwent stronger backbone fluctuations than compound- or p66138178-bound MBD2360393. This reflects the structural instability of MBD2360393 in the absence of bound molecules (or, conversely, DOT upon complex formation). Notably, the backbone fluctuation was also different between compound- and p66138178-bound MBD2360393, especially at the p66138178-contacting D366 and I369 residues, reflecting the compound-specific local conformational perturbation in MBD2360393. The presence of this compound-specific perturbation was also obvious from torsion angle distributions of the p66138178-interacting D366, I369, V376, and L383 residues (fig. S3E), as the backbone / torsion angles in both ABA:MBD2369 and APC:MBD2369 trajectories were different from those in apo-MBD2 and MBD2-p66 (tables S3 and S4). In addition, comparison between ABA:MBD2369 and APC:MBD2369 MD trajectories revealed that the two compounds likely evoked different local conformational changes at the p66138178-interacting residues of MBD2. In particular, significant difference in of I369 and / of V376 and L383 (table S4), which is distinguished from the similarity in / of D366 and of I369, suggested that I369 served as a turning point for the observed torsion angle differences more evident in its C-terminal region from I369. Collectively, comparative MD simulations of MBD2360393 in different states (apo-, compound-, and p66138178-bound) suggested the compound-specific induction of local conformational perturbation of MBD2, especially at its p66-interacting site, which would most likely interfere with the MBD2-p66 interaction. Therefore, we next examined whether these leads can actually inhibit the PPI of MBD2, with p66 both in vitro and in cell, by fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) and co-immunoprecipitation (co-IP) assay.

As the coiled-coil interaction between MBD2 and p66 occurs in an antiparallel fashion (17), MBD2 was fused with a FRET acceptor protein dTomato at its N terminus, whereas the FRET donor enhanced yellow fluorescent protein (eYFP) was C-terminally fused to p661206 (33) for in vitro FRET. Unfortunately, the full-length p66 was not available for the in vitro FRET studies due to the inclusion body formation in the Escherichia coli system for the recombinant production. The in vitro FRET result evidenced that both ABA and APC efficiently interfere with the MBD2-p66 interaction by provoking significant reduction of FRET, which, at 1 to 1.5 equimolar concentrations of the compounds, reached half of the value recorded for the MBD2-p661206 complex (Fig. 4A and fig. S4A). The FRET analysis in 293T cells by transient cotransfection of eYFP-MBD2 and mCherry-p66 expression constructs also showed the noticeable FRET reduction, which was dependent on the concentrations of the compounds used for the treatment (Fig. 4B and fig. S4B). Furthermore, the half maximal inhibitory concentration (IC50) values determined in this in-cell FRET experiments (1.93 and 1.75 M for ABA and APC, respectively; see Fig. 4B) were in good agreement with the MI50 values determined in the migration assay (2.03 and 2.24 M for ABA and APC, respectively; Fig. 2B). Last, the results of the co-IP assay to capture the endogenous MBD2-p66 complex corroborated the fact that ABA and APC inhibit the MBD2-p66 association with the submicromolar IC50 (Fig. 4C). Therefore, as the interruption of the MBD2-p66 interaction is anticipated to result in the prevention of the proper assembly of Mi-2/NuRD CRC, we subjected the compounds to an in-depth evaluation of biological activities targeting the function of Mi-2/NuRD CRC in cellular EMT and thereby in cancer metastasis.

(A) Inhibition of in vitro FRET dynamics of MBD2 interaction with p66 by ABA and APC. Relative mean FRET values for the corresponding ratios of chemical concentration over MBD2::p661206 were plotted. See fig. S4A for the original data. n = 3. (B) Inhibition of FRET dynamics of MBD2 interaction with p66 by ABA and APC in cells. Quantified FRET activities of mock- and compound-treated samples were obtained, and the relative FRET ratios for compounds were calculated by FRETcomp/FRETmock (see Materials and Methods). See also fig. S4B for representative immunofluorescence microscopic photos of cells. n = 2. (C) Dose-dependent suppression of the endogenous MBD2-p66 association by the ABA and APC compounds revealed by in vivo co-IP. Relative fold changes of MBD2 interaction with p66 (right) were obtained by the quantification of immunoblots (left). Data (means SD) in (A) and (B) were analyzed using Students t test. Ab, antibody; IgG, immunoglobulin G.

The cellular EMT process that drives cell migration and invasion is critical not only for wound healing but also for cancer metastasis, including promotion of CSC and drug-resistant properties of cancer cells (2931). As we have previously observed that the MBD2 and/or p66 down-regulation in cancer cell lines resulted in the depressed EMT and conversely promoted epithelial differentiation, we reasoned that disrupted PPI between MBD2 and p66 by the ABA and APC compounds could result in suppression of metastatic potentials of cancer cells by regulating the Mi-2/NuRD CRCmediated EMT. In agreement with these hypotheses, in mesenchymal type of cancer cells (triple-negative and basal-type breast cancers and aggressive colon cancers) treated with ABA or APC, the increased levels of epithelial markers (CDH1 and CTNNB1) were appreciable, whereas the mesenchymal marker (VIM, SNAIL, SLUG, and CDH2) expressions were suppressed. On the other hand, such an alteration indicative of mesenchymal-epithelial transition (MET) was not apparent in the epithelial cancer cells (luminal breast cancers and less aggressive colon cancer) (Fig. 5, A and B, and fig. S5A). Subsequent analyses confirmed that the compounds suppressed wound healing and migration/invasion abilities of the cancer cells (Fig. 5, C and D, and fig. S5B). In addition, flow cytometric measurements of the cell surface markers CD44 and CD24 indicated that the LM1 cells of the stem-like phenotype (CD44hi/CD24lo) were switched over to the nonstem phenotype (CD44lo/CD24lo) by the compound treatments (Fig. 5E), although the compounds did not induce significant alterations in the proliferation rates and cell cycle progression of the cells tested (Fig. 5, F and G, and fig. S5, C and D). Furthermore, the compound-treated cancer cells showed reduced capability of mammosphere formation (Fig. 5H and fig. S5E), thereby resulting in enhanced susceptibility of the cells to chemotherapeutic drugs including doxorubicin and cisplatin (Fig. 5I and fig. S5F). Last, mRNA sequencing (mRNA-Seq) results showed that global gene expression profiles of the ABA- or APC-treated cells were highly comparable to those of MBD2- or p66-knockdown cells but markedly discriminated from the profiles of nontreated wild-type cells (Fig. 5J), supporting no significant off-target effects as initially predicted by SEA (Fig. 2A). Together, these observations established antimetastatic activity of the lead compounds, ABA and APC, by demonstrating that the compounds actioned so specifically on the MBD2-p66 PPI system that the EMT process was efficiently modulated to induce transition of CSC-like cells from a mesenchymal-like state to a bona fide epithelial state.

(A) Representative images showing immunofluorescent signals for VIM or CDH1 (red) and 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) (blue) in LM1 (left) and HCT116 (right) cells treated with 10 M ABA or APC. Photo credit: S.H.S., Hanyang University. (B) Immunoblots showing the expression levels of EMT markers 48 hours after compound (10 M) treatment. ACTB was used as a loading control. A.U., arbitrary units. (C) Effects on wound healing, estimated by the recovered surface areas of scraped cell monolayers, 48 hours after treatment with 10 M ABA or APC. n = 4. (D) ABA and APC (10 M) impact on cell migration (left) and invasion (right) represented by the number of migrated and Matrigel-invaded cells in Transwell plates 48 hours following compound treatments. n = 3. (E) Relative proliferation rates quantified by 3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide (MTT) assay after 2 days. Cells were treated with 10 M ABA or APC. n = 2. (F) Cell cycle analysis by fluorescence-activated cell sorter (FACS). Cells were treated with 10 M ABA or APC. n = 2. (G) Number of spheres counted by the naked eye after 5 days. Cells were treated with 10 M ABA or APC. n = 3. (H) Representative cell population images for the stem-like CD44hi profile of the ABA- or APC-treated LM1 cells analyzed by FACS. Data from one experiment are shown as averages of two technical replicates. (I) Sensitivity to doxorubicin (left) and cisplatin (right) of the 10 M ABA- or APC-treated cells quantified by MTT assay. n = 2. (J) Heatmap of mRNA-Seq data, which demonstrates similarity in gene expression between ABA- or APC-treated cells and MBD2 or p66 knockdown LM1 cells. Data (means SD) in (E) to (I) were analyzed using Students t test. **P < 0.01 and *P < 0.05.

Antimetastatic efficacy of the two selected lead compounds in vivo was analyzed using xenograft mice transplanted with the LM1 cells, which were chosen for its potent ability to readily metastasize to lung in mice (40). Here, ABA (10 g kg1) and APC (20 g kg1) compounds were administered by intravenous injection six times every 3 days from day 10 after the subcutaneous injection of the green fluorescent protein (GFP)tagged LM1 cells, followed by sacrifice of the mice (after 4 days of the last administration) for subsequent analysis of tumors (Fig. 6, A and B). Notably, although growth inhibition of original tumor was not significant (Fig. 6, A, C, and D), both ABA and APC compounds exhibited a potent inhibition of the cancer metastasis to lung (represented by the number of nodules developed in lung; Fig. 6C), with no significant effects on body weight of the xenograft mice (Fig. 6B). It was also confirmed by immunohistochemistry that the injected LM1 cells were responsible for the origination of tumor and the metastasized tumor nodules in lung (Fig. 6D). In contrast, histological properties of major organs (Fig. 6E) and complete blood count (CBC) result (Fig. 6F) of the compound-administered mice remained normal. Thus, both ABA and APC appear to be promising antimetastatic agents that are unlikely to cause adverse effects in normal tissues.

(A) Estimated volume (means SEM; P value for significance test by ANOVA) of original tumor developed during the experimental period with and without the drug administration. n = 8 for each group. (B) Body weights of mice monitored at the starting and ending point of experiment. (C) Effects of the compound administration on the xenograft tumor and its metastasis. Estimated tumor weights are presented for the original tumors, whereas the number of nodules developed by lung metastasis is plotted. (D) Representative photographs for lung nodules acquired 29 days after injection of the LM1 cells. Images of metastasized lung tissue sections illustrated by hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) staining and GFP immunohistochemistry (IHC). Yellow arrowhead represents the tumor nodule, and red dotted area indicates the tumor region. Numbers below the H&E-stained tissue sections indicate the average number of tumor nodules in all mice of the same group. Photo credit: M.Y.K. and S.C., Hanyang University. (E) Representative images of H&E-stained tissue sections for the major organs derived from the xenograft NOD-Prkdcscid IL2rg/ (NPG) mice after completion of the metastasis inhibition tests with the ABA and APC administration (top). Histological scoring (tumor-bearing mice/total mice) for the H&E-stained major organs of the xenograft mice (bottom). Scale bars, 500 m. Photo credit: M.Y.K. and S.C., Hanyang University. (F) CBC analysis of the ABA- and APC-treated xenograft mice. WBC, white blood cell count; RBC, red blood cell count; HGB, hemoglobin; HCT, hematocrit; MCV, mean corpuscular volume; MCH, mean corpuscular hemoglobin; MCHC, mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration; RDW, red cell distribution width; PLT, platelet count; N.S., not significant. Data (means SD) in (B) to (D) and (G) were analyzed using Students t test.

IDPs/IDPRs are important not only for normal cellular processes but also for the development of various human diseases. In particular, proteins validated as potential drug targets have been increasingly identified to contain IDPRs crucial for PPI mediation. However, the dynamic structure of IDPs/IDPRs limits their use in rational structure-based drug discovery. There are some successful examples of finding of compounds that can bind to and regulate the IDPR-containing proteins (e.g., the c-Myc IDPR-targeting compound 10058-F4). However, most of the current approaches to discover compounds targeting functional IDPR are based on random screening. Meanwhile, because many IDPRs undergo characteristic DOTs upon specific PPIs (9, 10), related structural information can be retrieved from their complexed structures. This, together with the in-depth insights into the compound binding modes (38) and the rapidly accumulating knowledge of the IDPR structural properties (6, 7), suggests the possibility for utilization of the structure-based rational approach as a feasible route for efficient discovery of drug leads targeting specific IDPRs engaged in DOT-based PPIs.

The present novel approach to an antimetastatic agent development provides a prime example of a collaborative work of in silico, in vitro, in cell, and in vivo analyses to discover the drug candidates targeting a pharmacologically important IDPR. In particular, we propose here a three-step computational platform for finding these drug leads. First, IDPRs with DOT potential are selected as potential drug-target sites. We speculate that these regions can be identified based on the characteristic features of their intrinsic disorder predisposition profiles similar to those observed in the known DOT-based PPI regions of MBD2 (residues 360 to 393) and c-Myc (residues 395 to 430) (Fig. 1B). Second, for virtual screening, ordered conformation is taken from the structure of selected IDPR complexed with binding partner. Third, MD simulation is conducted for the selected drug leads targeting IDPRs. Because the structure of target IDPR is dynamic (6, 7) and because the presumably entropy-driven compound binding also occurs in a dynamic fashion (38), MD simulations of the compound-target complex structures are essential for detailed evaluation of the binding feasibility. In this study, MD simulation indicated the compound bindingspecific conformational perturbations of MBD2, particularly at its critical PPI site with p66, which could provide a structural basis for the molecular inhibition of the DOT-based PPI of MBD2. In general, specific molecular interactions of IDPs/IDPRs are known to be accomplished in distinctive ways such as DOT, avidity, allovalency, and fuzzy binding; the last three involves multivalent binding sites, whereas the first represents a simple two-state binding involving a single binding site (41, 42). The present MD simulation result suggests that the ABA and APC binding of the MBD2 IDPR resembled a dynamic, multivalent interaction at low entropic cost, rather than the DOT-based interaction relevant to its p66 binding. The entropy-driven compound binding and structural multiplicity of the compound-bound IDPR have been identified earlier in the case of 10058-F4 binding to c-Myc402412, which also requires just a few stable atomic interactions (38, 39). In this regard, increased fuzziness of the MBD2 IDPR by the compound binding may conversely lead to decreased propensity for DOT for its p66 interaction, although the exact mode of binding of our compounds to the MBD2 IDPR, which can ultimately underlie their PPI inhibition mechanism, remains to be characterized in detail.

Our computational platform also contains an additional in silico study using the SEA, which was practical to assess off-target probability of the suggested compounds that is potentially associated with adverse effects in actual usage. In subsequent studies, mRNA-Seq results in cells (Fig. 5J) were consistent with the SEA result (Fig. 2A) that predicted no significant off-target probability, and in vivo administration of the suggested compounds raised no significant toxicity in normal tissues (Fig. 6, E and F).

It is generally appreciated that identifying and understanding molecular regulation and signaling network involved in the EMT process are essential to provide a molecular basis for antimetastatic drug development (43, 44). Concerning this study, we have recently identified the MBD2-p66 molecular system in Mi-2/NuRD CRC as a promising target for EMT modulation by observing the induction of MET (conversed process of EMT) by knockdown of MBD2 and/or p66 in cancer cells. Together with this parallel effort, the present discovery of novel antimetastatic agents targeting a component of Mi-2/NuRD CRC validates that this epigenetic machinery can serve as an emerging target system for efficient antimetastatic drug developments. Both ABA and APC disrupting the specific PPI of MBD2 were able to suppress cellular EMT processes, thereby inducing epithelial differentiation of the more aggressive CSCs. Last, our compounds potently inhibited the cancer metastasis in vivo. Furthermore, considering that they raised no noticeable adverse effects on blood and normal tissues, the present results provide a basis for a novel safe control of cancer metastasis. Hence, found in this study, lowmolecular weight (<250 g mol1) compounds constitute a pioneering example of antimetastatic agents acting on a specific Mi-2/NuRD CRC component. In addition, the present observation that the compound treatments rendered the cancer cells more sensitive to anticancer drugs (Fig. 5I) provides important implications in combination therapy for cancer.

In conclusion, this study successfully used a rational approach to search for the novel antimetastatic agents acting via inhibition of the DOT-based PPI in an IDPR. As IDPs/IDPRs play crucial roles in diverse cellular processes (6, 7), we believe that this platform can be applied for the discovery of innovative drug leads targeting DOT-based PPI regions in proteins associated with various cancers and other diseases.

This study was designed to develop a novel platform for the discovery of drug leads based on molecular docking and MD simulations of the DOT-associated IDPRs of target proteins and, as a proof of concept, to identify candidate drugs, suppressing metastatic potentials of cancer cells in vitro and in vivo, by targeting an IDPR of MBD2 that undergoes a DOT upon association with its binding partner p66 for the integration of the Mi-2/NuRD CRC. These objectives were addressed by (i) analyzing intrinsic disorder predispositions of drug-target proteins and evaluating potential disorder-based binding regions (45), (ii) doing molecular docking with druggable compounds from the ZINC compound library to the potential drug-target sites, (iii) selecting two lead compounds based on the docking scores and off-target probabilities and experimental validation of target binding, (iv) evaluating the mode and efficiency of the compound binding via MD simulations, (v) assessing the identified leads for biological effects suppressing metastatic potentials of cancer cells, and (vi) verifying antimetastatic efficacy in a murine xenograft tumor model.

In animal studies, mice were randomly assigned to treatment and control groups. Numbers of tested mice were specified in each figure. Outliers were removed only if mice died at an early stage of the treatment according to the Hanyang University Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC) dimension guideline. The primary end points were tumor size and cancer metastasis to lung. Mice were euthanized when moribund or at the end of the prespecified treatment period. All procedures were performed in accordance with institutional protocols approved by the IACUC of the Hanyang University. Pathology analysis was performed in a blinded fashion.

Data were presented as means SE. The sample size for each experiment, n, was included in Results and the associated figure legend. Everywhere in the text, the difference between two subsets of data was considered statistically significant if the one-tailed Students t test gave a significance level P (P value) less than 0.05. Multiple comparisons, more than two means, were performed using a univariate analysis of variance (ANOVA), where a Scheffe posttest was performed in some cases or Kruskal-Wallis test. GraphPad Prism was used to generate MI50 curves for cell lines treated with ABA and APC in vitro. In addition, IC50 curves for FRET assay were also generated by GraphPad Prism. Statistical analyses were performed using IBM SPSS statistics 23.

Supplementary material for this article is available at http://advances.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/5/11/eaav9810/DC1

Supplementary Materials and Methods

Fig. S1. Structural information on MBD2 and c-Myc.

Fig. S2. SEA and cell migration analysis for the nine selected hit compounds targeting MBD2.

Fig. S3. MD simulations of the selected compound-docked structures of MBD2 and c-Myc.

Fig. S4. FRET dynamics of ABA and APC to the MBD2-p66 interaction.

Fig. S5. Effects of ABA and APC on the expression of EMT markers and CSC properties in various breast and colon cancer cells.

Table S1. Molecular docking result (H-bond, hydrogen bond; N/A, not available).

Table S2. Selection of compound by in silico assessment of off-target probability by SEA analysis.

Table S3. Backbone torsion angle variations (95% confidence interval) of the four key residues in the four different MD simulations of MBD2.

Table S4. T test and P values on the backbone torsion angle summarized in table S3.

Table S5. Primer sets for vector construction.

Original data file S1. Figure 1D PDB files.

References (4669)

This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution license, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

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Rational discovery of antimetastatic agents targeting the intrinsically disordered region of MBD2 - Science Advances

Novocure Announces 43 Presentations on Tumor Treating Fields at 24th Annual Meeting of the Society for Neuro-Oncology – Business Wire

ST. HELIER, Jersey--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Novocure (NASDAQ: NVCR) today announced 43 presentations on Tumor Treating Fields, including three oral presentations, will be featured at the 24th Annual Meeting of the Society for Neuro-Oncology (SNO) on Nov. 20 through Nov. 24 in Phoenix. Presentations on Tumor Treating Fields cover a broad and growing range of topics. External authors prepared 34 of the 43 presentations.

The oral presentations on Tumor Treating Fields include an EF-14 post hoc subgroup analysis on tumor growth rates, and the pilot study results of Tumor Treating Fields combined with radiotherapy and temozolomide for the treatment of newly diagnosed glioblastoma.

Highlights among poster presentations include the combinations of Tumor Treating Fields with other therapies such as radiation and immunotherapies, simulations, health economics and outcomes research, patient advocacy, and research on the mechanism of action.

Year after year, it is amazing to see the continued focus on Tumor Treating Fields at the SNO Annual Meeting, said Novocure CEO Asaf Danziger. From our first presentation at SNO in 2008 to today, more than 250 abstracts on Tumor Treating Fields have been included at one of the most important conferences in neuro-oncology worldwide. I am proud of our team for their relentless focus on innovative research and for their consistent drive in raising awareness of our therapy among the scientific community. We look forward to another productive year at SNO.

Oral Presentations

(Abstract #: ACTR-46) Tumor Treating Fields combined with radiotherapy and temozolomide for the treatment of newly diagnosed glioblastoma: Final results from a pilot study. R. Grossman. 2:45 to 2:50 p.m. MST Nov. 22.

(Abstract #: RTHP-28) TTFields treatment affects tumor growth rates: A post-hoc analysis of the pivotal phase 3 EF-14 trial. Z. Bomzon. 4:05 to 4:10 p.m. MST Nov. 22.

(Abstract #: QOLP-24) Patients/parents experiences of receiving Optune delivered tumor treatment fields: A Pediatric Brain Tumor Consortium Study: PBTC-048. J. Lai. 7:50 to 7:54 p.m. MST Nov. 22.

Poster Presentations

(Abstract #: RDNA-10) TTFields treatment planning for targeting multiple lesions spread throughout the brain. Z. Bomzon. 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. MST Nov. 22. (Radiation Biology and DNA Repair/Basic Science)

(Abstract #: NIMG-20) Evaluation of head segmentation quality for treatment planning of tumor treating fields in brain tumors. Z. Bomzon. 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. MST Nov. 22. (Neuro-Imaging/Clinical Research)

(Abstract #: HOUT-24) Challenges and successes in the global reimbursement of a breakthrough medical technology for treatment of glioblastoma multiforme. C. Proescholdt. 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. MST Nov. 22. (Health Outcome Measures/Clinical Research)

(Abstract #: EXTH-02) The blood brain barrier (BBB) permeability is altered by Tumor Treating Fields (TTFields) in vivo. E. Schulz. 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. MST Nov. 22. (Experimental Therapeutics/Basic Science)

(Abstract #: IMMU-06) TTFields induces immunogenic cell death and STING pathway activation through cytoplasmic double-stranded DNA in glioblastoma cells. D. Chen. 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. MST Nov. 22. (Immunology/Basic Science)

(Abstract #: DRES-06) Prostaglandin E Receptor 3 mediates resistance to Tumor Treating Fields in glioblastoma cells. D. Chen. 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. MST Nov. 22. (Drug Resistance/Basic Science)

(Abstract #: EXTH-34) In vitro tumor treating fields (TTFields) applied prior to radiation enhances the response to radiation in patient-derived glioblastoma cell lines. S. Mittal. 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. MST Nov. 22. (Experimental Therapeutics/Basic Science)

(Abstract #: CSIG-20) Effect of tumor-treating felds (TTFields) on EGFR phosphorylation in GBM cell lines. M. Reinert. 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. MST Nov. 22. (Cell Signaling and Signaling Pathways/Basic Science)

(Abstract #: CBMT-14) The dielectric properties of brain tumor tissue. M. Proescholdt. 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. MST Nov. 22. (Cell Biology and Metabolism/Basic Science)

(Abstract #: CSIG-26) Is intrinsic apoptosis the signaling pathway activated by tumor-treating fields for glioblastoma. K. Carlson. 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. MST Nov. 22. (Cell Signaling and Signaling Pathways/Basic Science)

(Abstract #: ATIM-08) Trial in Progress: CA209-9Y8 phase 2 trial of tumor treating fields (TTFs), nivolumab plus/minus ipilimumab for bevacizumab-nave, recurrent glioblastoma. Y. Odia. 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. MST Nov. 22. (Adult Clinical Trials Immunologic/Clinical Research)

(Abstract #: ACTR-60) A phase 2, historically controlled study testing the efficacy of TTFields with adjuvant temozolomide in high-risk WHO grade II and III astrocytomas (FORWARD). A. Allen. 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. MST Nov. 22. (Adult Clinical Trials - Non-Immunologic/Clinical Research)

(Abstract #: TMIC-54) Comparison of cellular features at autopsy in glioblastoma patients with standard treatment of care and tumor treatment fields. A. Lowman. 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. MST Nov. 22. (Tumor Microenvironment/Basic Science)

(Abstract #: ACTR-26) Safety and efficacy of bevacizumab plus Tumor Treating Fields (TTFields) in patients with recurrent glioblastoma (GBM): data from a phase II clinical trial. J. Fallah. 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. MST Nov. 22. (Adult Clinical Trials Non-immunologic/Clinical Research)

(Abstract #: RBTT-02) Radiosurgery followed by Tumor Treating Fields for brain metastases (1-10) from NSCLC in the phase 3 METIS trial. V. Gondi. 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. MST Nov. 22. (Randomized Brain Tumor Trials in Development/Clinical Research)

(Abstract #: INNV-16) Complete response of thalamic IDH wildtype glioblastoma after proton therapy followed by chemotherapy together with Tumor Treating Fields. M. Stein. 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. MST Nov. 22. (Innovations in Patient Care/Clinical Research)

(Abstract #: INNV-20) A systematic review of tumor treating fields therapy for primary for recurrent and glioblastoma. P. Shah. 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. MST Nov. 22. (Innovations in Patient Care/Clinical Research)

(Abstract #: STEM-16) Dual Inhibition of Protein Arginine Methyltransferase 5 and Protein Phosphatase 2a Enhances the Anti-tumor Efficacy in Primary Glioblastoma Neurospheres. H. Sur. 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. MST Nov. 22. (Stem Cells/Basic Science)

(Abstract #: CBMT-13) 3DEP system to test the electrical properties of different cell lines as predictive markers of optimal tumor treating fields (TTFields) frequency and sensitivity. M. Giladi. 5 to 7 p.m. MST Nov. 23. (Cell Biology and Metabolism/Basic Science)

(Abstract #: EXTH-37) A novel transducer array layout for delivering Tumor Treating Fields to the spine. Z. Bomzon. 5 to 7 p.m. MST Nov. 23. (Experimental Therapeutics/Basic Science)

(Abstract #: NIMG-41) Rapid and accurate creation of patient-specific computational models for GBM patients receiving Optune therapy with conventional imaging (T1w/PD). Z. Bomzon. 5 to 7 p.m. MST Nov. 23. (Neuro-Imaging/Clinical Research)

(Abstract #: HOUT-17) Utilities of rare cancers like malignant pleural mesothelioma and glioblastoma multiforme - do they compare? C. Proescholdt. 5 to 7 p.m. MST Nov. 23. (Health Outcome Measures/Clinical Research)

(Abstract #: INNV-17) Innovative educational approaches to enhance patient and caregiver understanding of Optune for glioblastoma. M. Shackelford. 5 to 7 p.m. MST Nov. 23. (Innovations in Patient Care/Clinical Research)

(Abstract #: EXTH-05) Therapeutic implications of TTFields induced DNA damage and replication stress in novel combinations for cancer treatment. N. Karanam. 5 to 7 p.m. MST Nov. 23. (Experimental Therapeutics/Basic Science)

(Abstract #: EXTH-31) Combination of tumor treating fields (TTFields) and paclitaxel produces additive reductions in proliferation and clonogenicity in patient-derived metastatic non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) cells. S. Michelhaugh. 5 to 7 p.m. MST Nov. 23 (Experimental Therapeutics/Basic Science)

(Abstract #: EXTH-53) Tumor Treating Fields leads to changes in membrane permeability and increased penetration by anti-glioma drugs. E. Chang. 5 to 7 p.m. MST Nov. 23. (Experimental Therapeutics/Basic Science)

(Abstract #: RDNA-01) Tubulin and microtubules as molecular targets for TTField therapy. J. Tuszynski. 5 to 7 p.m. MST Nov. 23. (Radiation Biology and DNA Repair/Basic Science)

(Abstract #: SURG-01) OptimalTTF-1: Final results of a phase 1 study: First glioblastoma recurrence examining targeted skull remodeling surgery to enhance Tumor Treating Fields strength. A. Korshoej. 5 to 7 p.m. MST Nov. 23. (Surgical Therapy/Clinical Research)

(Abstract #: ATIM-39) Phase 2 open-labeled study of adjuvant temozolomide plus Tumor Treating Fields plus Pembrolizumab in patients with newly diagnosed glioblastoma (2-THE-TOP). D. Tran. 5 to 7 p.m. MST Nov. 23. (Adult Clinical Trials Immunologic/Clinical Research)

(Abstract #: ACTR-49) Initial experience with scalp preservation and radiation plus concurrent alternating electric tumor-treating fields (SPARE) for glioblastoma patients. A. Song. 5 to 7 p.m. MST Nov. 23. (Adult Clinical Trials - Non-Immunologic/Clinical Research)

(Abstract #: RTHP-25) TTFields dose distribution alters tumor growth patterns: An imaging-based analysis of the randomized phase 3 EF-14 trial. M. Ballo. 5 to 7 p.m. MST Nov. 23. (Radiation Therapy/Clinical Research)

(Abstract #: ACTR-19) Report on the combination of Axitinib and Tumor Treating Fields (TTFields) in three patients with recurrent glioblastoma. E. Schulz. 5 to 7 p.m. MST Nov. 23. (Adult Clinical Trials - Non-Immunologic/Clinical Research)

(Abstract #: PATH-47) TTF may apply selective pressure to glioblastoma clones with aneuploidy: a case report. M. Ruff. 5 to 7 p.m. MST Nov. 23. (Molecular Pathology and Classification Adult and Pediatric/Clinical Research)

(Abstract #: RARE-39) Combination of Tumor Treating Fields (TTFields) with lomustine (CCNU) and temozolomide (TMZ) in newly diagnosed glioblastoma (GBM) patients - a bi-centric analysis. L. Lazaridis. 5 to 7 p.m. MST Nov. 23. (Rare Tumors/Clinical Research)

(Abstract #: ACTR-31) The use of TTFields for newly diagnosed GBM patients in Germany in routine clinical care (TIGER: TTFields in Germany in routine clinical care). O. Bahr. 5 to 7 p.m. MST Nov. 23. (Adult Clinical Trials Non-Immunologic/Clinical Research)

(Abstract #: INNV-09) Clinical efficacy of tumor treating fields for newly diagnosed glioblastoma. Y. Liu. 5 to 7 p.m. MST Nov. 23. (Innovations in Patient Care/Clinical Research)

(Abstract #: EXTH-61) Celecoxib Improves Outcome of Patients Treated with Tumor Treating Fields. K. Swanson. 5 to 7 p.m. MST Nov. 23. (Experimental Therapeutics/Basic Science)

(Abstract #: INNV-23) Glioblastoma and Facebook: An Analysis Of Perceived Etiologies and Treatments. N. Reddy. 5 to 7 p.m. MST Nov. 23. (Innovations in Patient Care/Clinical Research)

(Abstract #: INNV-12) Outcomes in a Real-world Practice For Patients With Primary Glioblastoma: Impact of a Specialized Neuro-oncology Cancer Care Program. N. Banerji. 5 to 7 p.m. MST Nov. 23. (Innovations in Patient Care/Clinical Research)

(Abstract #: RBTT-11): NRG Oncology NRG-BN006: A Phase II/III Randomized, Open-label Study of Toca 511 and Toca FC With Standard of Care Compared to Standard of Care in Patients With Newly Diagnosed Glioblastoma. M. Ahluwalia. 5 to 7 p.m. MST Nov. 23. (Randomized Brain Tumor Trials Development/Clinical Research)

About Novocure

Novocure is a global oncology company working to extend survival in some of the most aggressive forms of cancer through the development and commercialization of its innovative therapy, Tumor Treating Fields. Tumor Treating Fields is a cancer therapy that uses electric fields tuned to specific frequencies to disrupt solid tumor cancer cell division. Novocures commercialized products are approved for the treatment of adult patients with glioblastoma and malignant pleural mesothelioma. Novocure has ongoing or completed clinical trials investigating Tumor Treating Fields in brain metastases, non-small cell lung cancer, pancreatic cancer, ovarian cancer and liver cancer.

Headquartered in Jersey, Novocure has U.S. operations in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, Malvern, Pennsylvania and New York City. Additionally, the company has offices in Germany, Switzerland, Japan and Israel. For additional information about the company, please visit http://www.novocure.com or follow us at http://www.twitter.com/novocure.

Approved Indications

Optune is intended as a treatment for adult patients (22 years of age or older) with histologically-confirmed glioblastoma multiforme (GBM).

Optune with temozolomide is indicated for the treatment of adult patients with newly diagnosed, supratentorial glioblastoma following maximal debulking surgery, and completion of radiation therapy together with concomitant standard of care chemotherapy.

For the treatment of recurrent GBM, Optune is indicated following histologically- or radiologically-confirmed recurrence in the supratentorial region of the brain after receiving chemotherapy. The device is intended to be used as a monotherapy, and is intended as an alternative to standard medical therapy for GBM after surgical and radiation options have been exhausted.

The NovoTTF-100L System is indicated for the treatment of adult patients with unresectable, locally advanced or metastatic, malignant mesothelioma (MPM) to be used concurrently with pemetrexed and platinum-based chemotherapy.

Important Safety Information

Contraindications

Do not use Optune in patients with GBM with an implanted medical device, a skull defect (such as, missing bone with no replacement), or bullet fragments. Use of Optune together with skull defects or bullet fragments has not been tested and may possibly lead to tissue damage or render Optune ineffective. Do not use the NovoTTF-100L System in patients with MPM with implantable electronic medical devices such as pacemakers or implantable automatic defibrillators, etc.

Use of Optune for GBM or the NovoTTF-100L System for MPM together with implanted electronic devices has not been tested and may lead to malfunctioning of the implanted device.

Do not use Optune for GBM or the NovoTTF-100L System for MPM in patients known to be sensitive to conductive hydrogels. Skin contact with the gel used with Optune and the NovoTTF-100L System may commonly cause increased redness and itching, and may rarely lead to severe allergic reactions such as shock and respiratory failure.

Warnings and Precautions

Optune and the NovoTTF-100L System can only be prescribed by a healthcare provider that has completed the required certification training provided by Novocure.

The most common (10%) adverse events involving Optune in combination with chemotherapy in patients with GBM were thrombocytopenia, nausea, constipation, vomiting, fatigue, convulsions, and depression.

The most common (10%) adverse events related to Optune treatment alone in patients with GBM were medical device site reaction and headache. Other less common adverse reactions were malaise, muscle twitching, and falls related to carrying the device.

The most common (10%) adverse events involving the NovoTTF-100L System in combination with chemotherapy in patients with MPM were anemia, constipation, nausea, asthenia, chest pain, fatigue, device skin reaction, pruritus, and cough.

Other potential adverse effects associated with the use of the NovoTTF-100L System include: treatment related skin toxicity, allergic reaction to the plaster or to the gel, electrode overheating leading to pain and/or local skin burns, infections at sites of electrode contact with the skin, local warmth and tingling sensation beneath the electrodes, muscle twitching, medical site reaction and skin breakdown/skin ulcer.

If the patient has an underlying serious skin condition on the treated area, evaluate whether this may prevent or temporarily interfere with Optune and the NovoTTF-100L System treatment.

Do not prescribe Optune or the NovoTTF-100L System for patients that are pregnant, you think might be pregnant or are trying to get pregnant, as the safety and effectiveness of Optune and the NovoTTF-100L System in these populations have not been established.

Forward-Looking Statements

In addition to historical facts or statements of current condition, this press release may contain forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements provide Novocures current expectations or forecasts of future events. These may include statements regarding anticipated scientific progress on its research programs, clinical trial progress, development of potential products, interpretation of clinical results, prospects for regulatory approval, manufacturing development and capabilities, market prospects for its products, coverage, collections from third-party payers and other statements regarding matters that are not historical facts. You may identify some of these forward-looking statements by the use of words in the statements such as anticipate, estimate, expect, project, intend, plan, believe or other words and terms of similar meaning. Novocures performance and financial results could differ materially from those reflected in these forward-looking statements due to general financial, economic, regulatory and political conditions as well as more specific risks and uncertainties facing Novocure such as those set forth in its Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q filed on July 25, 2019, with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Given these risks and uncertainties, any or all of these forward-looking statements may prove to be incorrect. Therefore, you should not rely on any such factors or forward-looking statements. Furthermore, Novocure does not intend to update publicly any forward-looking statement, except as required by law. Any forward-looking statements herein speak only as of the date hereof. The Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 permits this discussion.

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Novocure Announces 43 Presentations on Tumor Treating Fields at 24th Annual Meeting of the Society for Neuro-Oncology - Business Wire

10 promising developments that can help Alzheimer’s patients – ISRAEL21c

November is Alzheimers Awareness Month. Its a fitting time to look at the latest Israeli advances in preventing, diagnosing and treating the progressive and incurable brain disorder.

Alzheimers disease (AD) is the most common cause of the 9.9 million new cases of dementia diagnosed each year worldwide. The disease primarily strikes the elderly population, affecting 30 percent of those over age of 85.

AD impacts memory, thinking and language skills, and even the ability to carry out simple tasks.

The disease occurs when a protein called amyloid beta aggregates in brain tissues. These protein clumps kill nerve cells, leading to damage in the brain-function mechanisms.

Here are 10 examples of promising Israeli approaches reported within the past two years alone.

PREVENTION

Various genetic, lifestyle and environmental factors can put a person at risk for AD. Among them are diabetes, high blood pressure, obesity, smoking, depression, cognitive inactivity or low education, and physical inactivity.

Preventing the onset of AD is the focus of these approaches:

Eitan Okun, Alzheimers disease researcher at Bar-Ilan University. Photo: courtesy

Most vaccines work by mounting an immune response toward a weakened pathogen to boost the immune systems ability to fight the real pathogen.

Okuns approach primes the body to attack amyloid beta protein clumps in the brain, the signature sign of AD.

Following experiments on mice, Okun is preparing for human trials on people at known risk of developing the disease in their 50s or younger: those genetically inclined toward Alzheimers and people with Down syndrome.

These critical trials will determine whether the vaccine actually works in humans, said Okun. Depending on the success rate and side effects from [human] testing, we will be able to know how much more time is needed to make the vaccine available on a global scale.

Okun also is investigating new ways to diagnose AD earlier and more accurately using advanced MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) technologies to detect initial signs of amyloid protein aggregation in the brain.

BGU Prof. Alon Friedman has invented a new treatment to prevent neurological diseases. Photo courtesy of Dr. Merav Shamir

Introduced by BGN Technologies of Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, the novel therapy hinges on the fact that a malfunctioning BBB allows neurotoxic blood products to enter the brain and cause damage leading to neurological diseases.

The lab of Prof. Alon Friedman discovered that treating the BBB at early stages can protect the brain and prevent disease development.

Their proposed treatment would combine Memantine and Losartan, which have been shown in preclinical studies to protect the integrity of the BBB when administered together. Partners are being sought to continue development.

Prof. Ester Segal of the Technion. Photo: courtesy

They reported on this advance in a recent cover story of the journal Small.

Nanoscale silicon chips invented in Prof. Ester Segals lab allow for the direct insertion of neural growth factor protein into the brain and its gradual release into the target tissue, bypassing the BBB (see above). Afterward delivering all the therapeutic protein loaded onto them, the chips safely dissolve.

In a series of experiments, we showed in mice that the two ways of delivering the platform into the brain led to the desired result, said Technion doctoral student Michal Rosenberg.

Our technology has also been tested in a cellular model of Alzheimers disease and indeed, the protein release has led to rescuing the nerve cells.

DIAGNOSIS

PET scans and spinal taps are now the gold standard for diagnosing AD. Theyre both expensive and carry risks.

Cheaper, noninvasive tests being developed in Israel also could be critical in providing a much earlier diagnosis, when treatment would be most effective.

Thats because the same beta-amyloid proteins that clump in the brain of AD patients appear in the retina of the eyes up to 15 years before the onset of AD symptoms.

RetiSpec developed the retinal scanner at the Ontario Brain Institute in Canada. Clinical studies are ongoing in Israel and Canada.

In October, RetiSpec received the Alzheimers Drug Discovery Foundations Diagnostics Accelerator Award to fund continued development of its hyperspectral imaging technology.

This could allow doctors to compare brain scans taken over time from the same patient, and to differentiate between healthy and diseased brain tissue, without resorting to invasive or dangerous procedures such as brain tissue biopsies, explained lead researcher Dr. Aviv Mezer.

Clara is based on a relatively recent understanding that AD affects the brains orientation system before it affects memory.

The overlap between how the self is oriented to the world and the brain mechanisms that are disturbed by Alzheimers disease is astonishing, Arzy told ISRAEL21c.

Clara asks patients questions about themselves and their relationships to people, places and events. It then compares that information to a baseline and generates a computer-based test tailored for the individual that can diagnose very early Alzheimers.

The team from Dr. Shahar Arzys computational neuropsychiatry lab at Hadassah Hebrew University Medical Center in Jerusalem. Photo: courtesy

According to a study Arzys team published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences and in the American Psychological Associations journal Neuropsychology, Clara is 95 percent accurate.

Clara is now in the midst of a five-year test at Harvard to compare data generated by the system with data from AD markers taken via amyloid PET scan, quantitative and functional MRI and other neuropsychological tests.

Jaul and Oded Meiron (a cognitive neuroscientist who heads the Electrophysiology and Neuro-cognition Lab in Herzogs Clinical Research Center for Brain Sciences) published an articlein the Journal of Alzheimers Disease outlining their discovery of the link between the two conditions.

The reason is that the abnormal changes in the brain that lead to dementia are happening in other parts of the body, including the skin. Skin tissue and brain tissue derive from the same embryonic stem cells.

Jaul and Meiron are working with an American company to develop a test to identify a biomarker for abnormal cell density in the skin of dementia patients. They hope that this skin test could pinpoint an individuals type and stage of dementia. The biomarkers show the most promise in identifying AD, they say.

TREATMENT

A variety of approved medications for AD including Exelon, developed in Israel cannot cure or stop the progression of the disease. They only relieve or delay AD symptoms, such as memory loss and confusion.

A few Israeli pharmaceuticals under development aim to improve Alzheimer treatment options.

Breathing in pure oxygen in a pressurized room or chamber stimulates the release of growth factors and stem cells, which promote healing.

This revolutionary treatment for Alzheimers disease uses a hyperbaric oxygen chamber, which has been shown in the past to be extremely effective in treating wounds that were slow to heal, said lead researcher Prof. Uri Ashery.

Asherys group tested the therapy on a mouse model of Alzheimers disease. The treatment was found to reduce behavioral deficiencies compared to control mice.

Remarkably, the treatment also reduced plaque pathology and neuroinflammation in the test mice by about 40 percent.

Further research will investigate the underlying mechanisms of the therapy and evaluate its beneficial effects in Alzheimer patients.

Yotam Nisemblat, CEO of ProteKt Therapeutics. Photo: courtesy

Incubated at FutuRx in Ness Ziona, ProteKt was spun out of PKR kinase inhibitor research by University of Haifa Prof. Kobi Rosenblum. Inhibition of the enzyme PKR is a unique idea for improving memory consolidation.

Protein aggregation tends to increase with age and can lead to neurodegeneration because proteins can adopt an erroneous configuration, where theyre misfolded, explains Prof. Martin Kupiec.

The paper he and his colleagues published in Molecular Cell describes how removing glucose from a particular aggregated protein made the blob dissolve.

If the results can be replicated in more complex proteins, scientists will have a new research avenue toward treatments that could reverse the neurodegenerative effect of protein aggregates, Kupiec says.

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10 promising developments that can help Alzheimer's patients - ISRAEL21c

Eli Lilly touts $400M manufacturing expansion, 100 new jobs to much fanfare in Indianapolis even though it’s been chopping staff – Endpoints News

Hepatitis delta, also known as hepatitis D, is a liver infection caused by the hepatitis delta virus (HDV) that results in the most severe form of human viral hepatitis for which there is no approved therapy.

HDV is a single-stranded, circular RNA virus that requires the envelope protein (HBsAg) of the hepatitis B virus (HBV) for its own assembly. As a result, hepatitis delta virus (HDV) infection occurs only as a co-infection in individuals infected with HBV. However, HDV/HBV co-infections lead to more serious liver disease than HBV infection alone. HDV is associated with faster progression to liver fibrosis (progressing to cirrhosis in about 80% of individuals in 5-10 years), increased risk of liver cancer, and early decompensated cirrhosis and liver failure.HDV is the most severe form of viral hepatitis with no approved treatment.Approved nucleos(t)ide treatments for HBV only suppress HBV DNA, do not appreciably impact HBsAg and have no impact on HDV. Investigational agents in development for HBV target multiple new mechanisms. Aspirations are high, but a functional cure for HBV has not been achieved nor is one anticipated in the forseeable future. Without clearance of HBsAg, anti-HBV investigational treatments are not expected to impact the deadly course of HDV infection anytime soon.

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Eli Lilly touts $400M manufacturing expansion, 100 new jobs to much fanfare in Indianapolis even though it's been chopping staff - Endpoints News

Global Stem Cell Therapy for Osteoarthritis Market 2019 Growth Factors, Technological Innovation and Emerging Trends 2024 – News Appear

MarketandResearch.bizhas recently announced the addition of new research report to its repository named,GlobalStem Cell Therapy for Osteoarthritis Market Research 2019 by Manufacturers, Regions, Countries, Types and Applications, Forecast to 2024. It provides a clear understanding of the market dynamics by studying the historical data and analyzing the current market situation. It aims to chalk the route of the market for the coming few years. It gives a comprehensive synopsis of the market picture including market overview, introduction, classification, market dynamics,and market size.

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Regenerative Medicine: Overcoming The Supply Chain Challenges – Contract Pharma

Regenerative medicine is one of modern sciences most exciting developments. Defined by the Medical Research Council, regenerative medicine is an interdisciplinary field that seeks to develop the science and tools that can help repair or replace damaged or diseased human cells or tissues to restore normal function.

In the human body, the liver is the only organ capable of regenerating itself spontaneouslyeven after serious injurybut in the future, any part of the human body may be capable of doing so. Our own cells will also be able to treat and cure diseases and conditions of the blood and immune system, as well as restore the blood system after treatments for specific cancers.

Once only imaginable in science fiction, the latest applications include engineered skin tissue to treat burn victims, custom-grown bones for implants and joint replacements, personalized dietary treatments using gut bacteria and just recently, the worlds first 3D vascularized engineered heart was created using a patients own cells and biological materials.

As scientists understanding and the tools at their disposal become more advanced, the closer to the widespread commercialization of regenerative medicine the pharmaceutical industry finds itself.However, offering regenerative medicine therapies at scale requires one of the biggest shake-ups to the global pharmaceutical supply chain ever seen. Without it, the world risks missing out on the curative promises of this next-generation medical technology.

Regenerative medicine is one of, if not the most, exciting advancements in modern science which has far-reaching benefits for big pharma, healthcare systems and patient outcomes.

Regenerative medicine is a growth industry in more than one sense of the word; as a sector, its growing from strength to strength. In fact, last year the global regenerative medicine market was worth $28 billion and its expected to grow to $81 billion by 2023.

As a more efficient and less invasive alternative to transplanting cells or organs to replace damaged or lost tissue, established pharma companies alongside small biotech start-ups are racing to discover and bring to market medicine-based approaches that stimulate the bodys natural ability to repair itself.The cutting-edge innovations of regenerative medicine generally fall into three distinct categories:

Replenish Replace Rejuvenate

Stem cells can generate vital growth factors to naturally reduce inflammation, increase muscle mass, repair joints, grow hair and boost the immune system, replenishing the body. Organ regeneration and 3D printing are replacing the reliance on the failing donor system and overcoming the issue of organ rejection. The root causes of aging are being better understood and delayed by using stem cells to rejuvenate the body.

Marking a new era in healthcare and one which has the promise of addressing the needs of an aging population challenged by escalating chronic diseases, regenerative medicine is certainly a game-changer. Beyond more effective medical treatments that can be applied routinely despite age, comorbidities, or disease severity, it also has the potential to cure many of todays incurable diseases and support healthcare systems to move towards a preventative model.

Today, regenerative medicine is largely confined to a research environment. In fact, according to a recent report, there were 1,028 clinical trials for regenerative therapies taking place globally at the end of 2018.

Regenerative medicine is poised to transform healthcare as we know it, offering potential cures for deadly diseases which before would require long-term treatment to manage. However, while billions are being spent on regenerative medicine research and clinical studies, little resource has, so far, been allocated to the management and delivery of innovative medical therapies at scale.

Currently, the race appears to be on between smaller Medtech companies and large multi-national pharmaceutical companies to see who wins first-mover advantage in the regenerative medicine market. Today, many established pharmaceutical companies prefer to partner with Medtech startups to in-license products in early clinical development stages as opposed to conducting early development on their own which comes at a huge cost. This is a risk-reduction tactic, but it could mean big pharma misses the boat.

The question remains unanswered as to whether a peer-to-peer collaborative model will prosper where Medtech companieswho are in some instances one step ahead of big pharma in terms of drug developmentare happy to be a third-party provider to big pharma who have the budgets and networks to truly deliver the regenerative medicine revolution.

Regulation is, and will continue to, play a hugely important role in delivering regenerative medicines from a lab setting to a clinical setting. Only recently, the FDA announced a new policy framework for the development of regenerative medicine products, taking into account the dynamic and fast-moving nature of the field.

Ultimately, the governments aim is to protect patients from products that pose potential significant risks, while accelerating access to safe and effective new therapies according to Former FDA Commissioner Dr. Scott Gottlieb. The FDA plans to achieve this over the coming years by driving stakeholder engagement with the developing regulatory framework in order to efficiently advance access to safe and effective regenerative medicine advanced therapies.

However, so far, progress by the pharma industry in coming into compliance with FDAs regulations for regenerative medicines has been slow, despite the grace period set by the FDA before it fully exercises enforcement fast approaching (ending in November 2020).

In order to speed up the process of bringing novel medicines to market, the FDA is toying with the idea of fast-tracking products that are deemed low risk to patients if sponsors have engaged with the regulatory process and demonstrated responsibility by filing Investigational New Drug Applications (INDs).

The FDA has also promised to strengthen its enforcement action against drug developers who are marketing unapproved products, prioritizing cases where the threat to patient health and safety is largest.For example, last November the FDA stepped in where a Californian business was selling stem cell products using umbilical cord blood for the treatment of arthritis and other conditions, despite this form of treatment not having FDA approval for that particular use. Several patients (at least 12) undergoing this treatment were hospitalized after developing infections of the bloodstream and joints, as well as abscesses along the spine and skull.

In summary, one of the FDAs central aims over the coming years is to drive stakeholder engagement with the developing regulatory framework for regenerative medicine advanced therapies in order to efficiently advance access to safe and effective new products.

The promise of regenerative medicine requires an innovative look at the complete product lifecycle, including the development of an efficient distribution network.

Once these novel drugs become mainstream, the entire healthcare ecosystem will have to adapt. Regulatory approval for any drug relies on it safely and successfully fulfilling its medical intent. As such, information about supply chain management needs to be submitted to the regulator after the completion of phase three clinical trials, including packaging, labeling, storage and distribution.

The clinical supply chains required to deliver these therapies are arguably the most complex the industry has seen so far, even more so than for biologic medicine. Thats because, unlike many mass-market drugs, regenerative medicine is either personalized or matched to a unique donor-recipient.

The distribution of regenerative medicine therapies is further complicated by the fact they are also extremely sensitive to exogenous factors like time and temperature. Therefore, there are strict conditions under which these therapies must be transported and received.

Advanced IT solutions and monitoring systems are being developed and employed to ensure end-to-end traceability across the pharma supply chain. These are giving clinicians access to view the progress of therapies and their distribution in real-time and allow users to automatically schedule or amend material collections in line with manufacturing capacity, helping to keep the supply chain as agile as possible and avoid costly wastage.

The live tissues and cells which form the basis of regenerative medicine products are highly sensitive and some have a shelf life of no more than a few hours, making distribution a complex task. Therefore, materials need to be transported from the site of harvest to manufacturing facilities, and from manufacturing facilities to medical institutions under strictly controlled conditions, within certain time periods and temperatures, according to different cell and tissue requirements which can vary from product to product.

Temperature-controlled logistics solutions are vital to ensure a safe, effective and financially viable supply chain network for these high-value shipments. Cryopreservation is one technique increasingly being used to deliver medicines at optimum temperature using vapor phase nitrogen, however, many clinical settings remain ill-equipped to handle such equipment.

Onsite production is an alternative manufacturing arrangement, particularly for autologous products which are derived from a patients own cells. However, this throws up a number of compliance and infrastructure challenges, as the hospital would need to comply with a host of regulations including installing a licensed clean room which may not be possible given budget restrictions and limited space onsite.As a first-generation technology, stakeholders will have a greater tolerance for higher pricing, but only for a limited time period. By streamlining the currently very expensive manufacturing process and improving supply chain management, yields will automatically get larger and costs will slowly come down.

While there are many challenges in the road ahead, 2019 certainly appears to be the start of regenerative medicines move to the big time. Just like big data and artificial intelligence is transforming the practice of medicine, regenerative medicine holds the promise of extending the bodys natural ability to replenish, replace and rejuvenate itself.

If the global health industry can work collaboratively on overcoming the challenges presented by delivering safe and effective advanced therapies, a dramatic extension of the human healthspan is possible. We may even reach the point where no disease is considered incurable, transforming healthcare as we know it.

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Regenerative Medicine: Overcoming The Supply Chain Challenges - Contract Pharma

Scientists find promising drug combination against lethal childhood brain cancers – National Institutes of Health

News Release

Wednesday, November 20, 2019

Studies in cell and animal models reveal insights into cancer cells vulnerability that could lead to new strategies against brain cancers.

Researchers have devised a new plan of attack against a group of deadly childhood brain cancers collectively called diffuse midline gliomas (DMG), including diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG), thalamic glioma and spinal cord glioma. Scientists at the National Institutes of Health, Stanford University, California, and Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, identified a drug pair that worked together to both kill cancer cells and counter the effects of a genetic mutation that causes the diseases.

The researchers showed that combining the two drugs panobinostat and marizomib was more effective than either drug by itself in killing DMG patient cells grown in the laboratory and in animal models. Their studies also uncovered a previously unrecognized vulnerability in the cancer cells that scientists may be able to exploit to develop new strategies against the cancer and related diseases. The results were published Nov. 20 in Science Translational Medicine.

DMGs are aggressive, hard-to-treat tumors that represent the leading cause of brain cancer-related death among U.S. children. DMGs typically affect a few hundred children a year between ages 4 to 12; most children die within a year of diagnosis. Most cases of DMG are caused by a specific mutation in histone genes. Histones are protein complexes in the cell nucleus. DNA wraps around histones to form chromatin, which packages DNA in the nucleus. How DNA winds and unwinds around histones is influenced by enzymes, including histone deacetylases. These enzymes add or remove chemical tags, which indirectly controls if genes are turned on or off.

In an earlier study, Stanford neuro-oncologist Michelle Monje. M.D., Ph.D., and her colleagues showed that panobinostat, which blocks key histone deacetylase enzymes, could restore the DIPG histone function to a more normal state. While panobinostat is already in early clinical testing in DIPG patients, its usefulness may be limited because cancer cells can learn to evade its effects. So Monjes team wanted to identify other possible drugs and combinations of them that could affect the cancer.

Very few cancers can be treated by a single drug, said Monje, a senior author of the study who treats children with DIPG and other diffuse midline gliomas. Weve known for a long time that we would need more than one treatment option for DIPG. The challenge is prioritizing the right ones when there are thousands of potential options. Were hopeful that this combination will help these children.

Monje and the National Cancer Institutes Katherine Warren, M.D., now at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Boston Childrens Hospital, collaborated with Craig Thomas, Ph.D., and his colleagues at the NIHs National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS). Thomas and his team used NCATS drug screening expertise and matrix screening technology to examine drugs and drug combinations to see which ones were toxic to DIPG patient cells.

NCATS robotics-enabled, high-throughput screening technologies enable scientists to rapidly test thousands of different drugs and drug combinations in a variety of ways. Scientists can examine the most promising single drugs and combinations, determine the most effective doses of each drug and learn more about the possible mechanisms by which these drugs act.

The NCATS researchers first studied the effects of single approved drugs and investigative compounds on DIPG cell models grown in the laboratory from patient cells. They focused on agents that could both kill DIPG cells and cross the brains protective blood-brain barrier, a necessity for a drug to be effective against DIPG in patients. The team then tested the most effective single agents in various combinations.

Such large, complex drug screens take a tremendous collaborative effort, said Thomas, also a senior study author. NCATS was designed to bring together biologists, chemists, engineers and data scientists in a way that enables these technically challenging studies.

While there were multiple, promising outcomes from these screens, the team focused on the combination of histone deacetylase inhibitors (like panobinostat) with drugs called proteasome inhibitors (such as marizomib). Proteasome inhibitors block cells normal protein recycling processes. The panobinostat-marizomib combination was highly toxic to DIPG cells in several models, including DIPG tumor cell cultures that represented the main genetic subtypes of the disease and mice with cells transplanted from patient tumors. The combination also reduced tumor size in mice and increased their survival. A similar response was found in spinal cord and thalamic DMG models developed from cells grown in culture from patient cells.

The screening studies also provided important clues to the ways the drugs were working. Building on these data, the collaborative team subsequently conducted a series of experiments that showed the DIPG cells responded to these drugs by turning off a biochemical process in the cells mitochondria that is partly responsible for creating ATP, which provides energy to cells. The drug combination essentially shuts down tumor cell ATP production.

The panobinostat-marizomib drug combination exposed an unknown metabolic vulnerability in DIPG cells, said first author Grant Lin, Ph.D., at Stanford University School of Medicine. We didnt expect to find this, and it represents an exciting new avenue to explore in the development of future treatment strategies for diffuse midline gliomas.

Plans are underway for clinical trials of the drug combination and of marizomib alone.

Many drugs that we test have multiple effects on DIPG cells, said Warren, a senior study author. Panobinostat, for example, inhibits a specific enzyme, but it has other mechanisms working in tumor cells that may contribute to its effectiveness. Were still trying to understand the various Achilles heels in these cancer cells. This work is an important step in translating our preclinical data into patients.

Monje stressed the panobinostat-marizomib combination might be an important component of a multitherapy strategy, including approaches that harness the immune system and those that disrupt factors in the tumor microenvironment that the glioma cells depend on to grow. Like Warren, Monje emphasized the need to better understand how drugs target and impact the DIPG cells vulnerabilities.

Our work with NCATS showed the need to gather more preclinical data in a systematic, high-throughput way to understand and prioritize the strategies and agents to combine, Monje said. Otherwise were testing things one or two drugs at a time and designing clinical trials without preclinical data based on hypothesized mechanisms of action. We want to move past this guesswork and provide preclinical evidence to guide clinical decisions and research directions.

Lin added, The idea is to get as many effective tools as possible to work with that can have an impact on patients.

The research was funded by Alexs Lemonade Stand Foundation, Izzys Infantry Foundation, McKenna Claire Foundation, Unravel Pediatric Cancer, Defeat DIPG Foundation, ChadTough Foundation, N8 Foundation, Kortney Rose Foundation, Cure Starts Now Foundation and the DIPG Collaborative, Sam Jeffers Foundation, Lyla Nsouli Foundation, Abbies Army Foundation, Waxman Family Research Fund, Virginia and D.K. Ludwig Fund for Cancer Research, National Institute for Neurological Disorders and Stroke (R01NS092597) and NIH Directors Common Fund (DP1NS111132), Maternal and Child Health Research Institute at Stanford, the Anne T. and Robert M. Bass Endowed Faculty Scholarship in Pediatric Cancer and Blood Diseases, The DIPG All-In Initiative and the NCATS and NCI intramural programs.

About the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS):NCATS conducts and supports research on the science and operation of translation the process by which interventions to improve health are developed and implemented to allow more treatments to get to more patients more quickly. For more information about how NCATS is improving health through smarter science, visithttps://ncats.nih.gov.

About the National Institutes of Health (NIH):NIH, the nation's medical research agency, includes 27 Institutes and Centers and is a component of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. NIH is the primary federal agency conducting and supporting basic, clinical, and translational medical research, and is investigating the causes, treatments, and cures for both common and rare diseases. For more information about NIH and its programs, visit http://www.nih.gov.

NIHTurning Discovery Into Health

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Scientists find promising drug combination against lethal childhood brain cancers - National Institutes of Health

Exclusive: Humans placed in suspended animation for the first time – New Scientist News

By Helen Thomson

shapecharge/Getty

Doctors have placed humans in suspended animation for the first time, as part of a trial in the US that aims to make it possible to fix traumatic injuries that would otherwise cause death.

Samuel Tisherman, at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, told New Scientist that his team of medics had placed at least one patient in suspended animation, calling it a little surreal when they first did it. He wouldnt reveal how many people had survived as a result.

The technique, officially called emergency preservation and resuscitation (EPR), is being carried out on people who arrive at the University of Maryland Medical Centre in Baltimore with an acute trauma such as a gunshot or stab wound and have had a cardiac arrest. Their heart will have stopped beating and they will have lost more than half their blood. There are only minutes to operate, with a less than 5 per cent chance that they would normally survive.

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EPR involves rapidly cooling a person to around 10 to 15C by replacing all of their blood with ice-cold saline. The patients brain activity almost completely stops. They are then disconnected from the cooling system and their body which would otherwise be classified as dead is moved to the operating theatre.

A surgical team then has 2 hours to fix the persons injuries before they are warmed up and their heart restarted. Tisherman says he hopes to be able to announce the full results of the trial by the end of 2020.

At normal body temperature about 37C our cells need a constant supply of oxygen to produce energy. When our heart stops beating, blood no longer carries oxygen to cells. Without oxygen, our brain can only survive for about 5 minutes before irreversible damage occurs. However, lowering the temperature of the body and brain slows or stops all the chemical reactions in our cells, which need less oxygen as a consequence.

Tishermans plan for the trial was that 10 people who receive EPR will be compared with 10 people who would have been eligible for the treatment but for the fact that the correct team wasnt in the hospital at the time of admittance.

The trial was given the go-ahead by the US Food and Drug Administration. The FDA made it exempt from needing patient consent as the participants injuries are likely to be fatal and there is no alternative treatment. The team had discussions with the local community and placed ads in newspapers describing the trial, pointing people to a website where they can opt out.

Tishermans interest in trauma research was ignited by an early incident in his career in which a young man was stabbed in the heart after an altercation over bowling shoes. He was a healthy young man just minutes before, then suddenly he was dead. We could have saved him if wed had enough time, he says. This led him to start investigating ways in which cooling might allow surgeons more time to do their job.

Animal studies showed that pigs with acute trauma could be cooled for 3 hours, stitched up and resuscitated. We felt it was time to take it to our patients, says Tisherman. Now we are doing it and we are learning a lot as we move forward with the trial. Once we can prove it works here, we can expand the utility of this technique to help patients survive that otherwise would not.

I want to make clear that were not trying to send people off to Saturn, he says. Were trying to buy ourselves more time to save lives.

In fact, how long you can extend the time in which someone is in suspended animation isnt clear. When a persons cells are warmed up, they can experience reperfusion injuries, in which a series of chemical reactions damage the cell and the longer they are without oxygen, the more damage occurs.

It may be possible to give people a cocktail of drugs to help minimise these injuries and extend the time in which they are suspended, says Tisherman, but we havent identified all the causes of reperfusion injuries yet.

Tisherman described the teams progress on Monday at a symposium at the New York Academy of Sciences. Ariane Lewis, director of the division of neuro-critical care at NYU Langone Health, said she thought it was important work, but that it was just first steps. We have to see whether it works and then we can start to think about how and where we can use it.

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Induction of Activated T Follicular Helper Cells is Critical for Anti-FVIII Inhibitor Development: Study – DocWire News

A new study published in Blood Advances suggests that inhibiting FVIII protein-specific T follicular helper (TFH) cells may be a viable strategy for preventing anti-FVIII inhibitor formation in hemophilia A (HA).

To conduct this study, FVIII-deficient (FVIIInull) mice with a targeted disruption of exon 17 of the FVIII gene27were obtained and crossed onto a C57BL/6J background. Subsequently, VWFnullFVIIInullmice, which are deficient in FVIII as well as VWF, were generated by crossing FVIIInullonto VWFnull.28Wild-type (WT) C57BL/6J mice, CD4-deficient (CD4/) mice,29and CXCR5-deficient (CXCR5/) mice30were purchased, and all study mice on the C57BL/6J background, except VWFnullFVIIInullmice, were on a B6/129S mixed genetic background.

The mice were kept in pathogen-free microisolator cages at the animal facilities before being immunized with recombinant human B-domaindeleted FVIII at a dose of 50 to 100 U/kg weekly for a duration of five to six weeks. The researchers collected blood samples five to seven days after the last immunization. The researchers immunizedC57BL/6J WT and mixed bone marrow (BM) chimeric mice with recombinant human full-length FVIII at a dose of 200 U/kg weekly over the duration of four weeks, followed by blood samples collected for assays after one week. In some experiments, CD4 T cells were depleted by the administration of anti-CD4 antibody GK1.5 on days 4 and 1 before the first immunization and 1 day before every other immunization.

BM chimeric mice were generated by transplantation of mixed BM cells from lethally irradiated mice, and BM cells were collected from the femurs, tibia, and humeri of donor mice, with red blood cells broken down. The lymphoid nodes (LNs) were isolated from immunized, FVIIInullmice. The spleens or lymphoid nodes (LNs) were isolated from rhF8-immunized, FVIIInullmice, and cells were stained for different proteins. The researchers used a 2-tailed Studentttest if data distribution passed the normality test, or the Mann-WhitneyUtest for comparing that failed the normality test.

FVIII inhibitor-producing mice showed increased germinal center (GC) formation and increased GC TFH cells in response to FVIII immunization. Emergence of TFH cells correlated with titers of anti-FVIII inhibitors. Re-challenge with FVIII antigen elicited recall responses of TFH cells, and in vitro FVIII re-stimulation resulted in antigen-specific proliferation of splenic CD4+T cells from FVIII-primed FVIIInullmice, and the proliferating cells expressed the TFH hallmark transcription factor BCL6. CXCR5+/+TFH-cellspecific deletion impaired anti-FVIII inhibitor production, confirming the essential role of CXCR5+/+TFH cells for the generation of FVIII-neutralizing antibodies.

Our results demonstrate that the induction of activated TFH cells in FVIIInullmice is critical for FVIII inhibitor development, suggesting that inhibition of FVIII-specific TFH-cell activation may be a promising strategy for preventing anti-FVIII inhibitor formation in patients with HA, the researchers wrote.

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Induction of Activated T Follicular Helper Cells is Critical for Anti-FVIII Inhibitor Development: Study - DocWire News