AMG 193, a Clinical Stage MTA-Cooperative PRMT5 Inhibitor, Drives Antitumor Activity Preclinically and in Patients with MTAP-Deleted Cancers.

Brian Belmontes, Katherine K Slemmons, Chun Su,Siyuan Liu,Antonia N Policheni,Jodi Moriguchi,Hong Tan, Fang Xie, Daniel Andrew Aiello,Yajing Yang, Raul Lazaro,Famke Aeffner,Matthew G Rees,Melissa M Ronan,Jennifer A Roth, Mikkel Vestergaard, Sanne Cowland, Jan Andersson, Ian Sarvary,Qing Chen, Pooja Sharma,Patricia Lopez,Nuria Tamayo,Liping H Pettus, Sudipa Ghimire-Rijal, Susmith Mukund,Jennifer R Allen, Jason DeVoss, Angela Coxon, Jordi Rodon, Francois Ghiringhelli,Nicolas Penel,Hans Prenen, Sanne Glad, Chen-Hua Chuang, Kiana Keyvanjah, Danielle M Townsley, John R Butler,Matthew P Bourbeau,Sean Caenepeel,Paul E Hughes

Cancer discovery(2024)

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摘要
One of the most robust synthetic lethal interactions observed in multiple functional genomic screens has been dependency on PRMT5 in cancer cells with MTAP deletion. We report the discovery of the clinical stage MTA-cooperative PRMT5 inhibitor AMG 193, which preferentially binds PRMT5 in the presence of MTA and has potent biochemical and cellular activity in MTAP-deleted cells across multiple cancer lineages. In vitro, PRMT5 inhibition induces DNA damage, cell cycle arrest, and aberrant alternative mRNA splicing in MTAP-deleted cells. In human cell line and patient-derived xenograft models, AMG 193 induces robust antitumor activity and is well tolerated with no impact on normal hematopoietic cell lineages. AMG 193 synergizes with chemotherapies or the KRAS G12C inhibitor sotorasib in vitro, and combination treatment in vivo significantly inhibits tumor growth. AMG 193 is demonstrating promising clinical activity, including confirmed partial responses in patients with MTAP-deleted solid tumors from an ongoing phase 1/2 study.
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