Saturday, March 9, 2024

Getting Cancer Cells to Shoot Themselves

New chemicals that make novel linkages among cellular components can be powerful drugs.

One theme that has become common in molecular biology over the years is the prevalence of proteins whose only job is to bring other proteins together. Many proteins lack any of the usual jazzy functions, like catalytic enzyme, or ion channel, or signaling kinase, but just serve as "conveners", bringing other proteins together. Typically they are regulated in some way, by phosphorylation, expression, or localization, and some of these proteins serve as key "scaffolds" for the activation of some process, like G-protein activation, or cell cycle control, or cell growth. 

Well, the drug industry has caught on, and is starting to think about chemicals that can do similar things, resulting in occasionally powerful results. Conventional drug design has aimed to bind to whatever protein is responsible for some ill, and inhibit it. Such as an oncogene, or an over-active component of the immune system. This has led to many great drugs, but has significant limitations. The chemical has to bind not just anywhere on the target, but at the particular spot (the active site) that is its business end, where its action happens. And it has to bind really well, since binding and inhibiting only half the target proteins in a cell (or the body) will typically only have a modest effect. These requirements are quite stringent and result in many protein targets being deemed difficult to drug, or "undruggable".

A paradigm for a new kind of chemical drug, which links two functions, is the PROTAC class, which combines binding with a target on one end, with another end that binds to the cell's protein destruction machinery, thereby not just inhibiting the target, but destroying it. A new paper describes an even more nuclear option along this line of drug development, linking an oncogene with a second part that activates the cellular suicide machinery. One can imagine that this approach can have far more dramatic effects.

These researchers synthesize and demonstrate a chemical that binds on one end the oncogene BCL6, mutations of which can cause B cell lymphoma. This gene is a transcription repressor, and orchestrates the development of particular immunologic T cells called T follicular helper cells. One of its roles is to prevent the suicide of these cells when an antigen is present, which is when the cells are most needed. If over-expressed in cancer, these cells think they really need to protect the body and proliferate wildly.

The other end of this chemical, called TCIP1, binds to BRD4, which is another transcription regulator, but this one activates the cell suicide genes, instead of turning them off. Both ends of this molecule were based on previously known structures. The innovation was solely in linking them together. I should say parenthetically that BRD4 is itself recognized as an oncogene, as it can promote cell growth and prevent cell suicide in many settings. So it has ambivalent roles, (inviting a lot of vague writing), and it is somewhat curious that these researchers focused on BRD4 as an apoptosis driver.

"TCIP1 kills diffuse large B cell lymphoma cell lines, including chemotherapy-resistant, TP53-mutant lines, at EC50 of 1–10 nM in 72 h" 
Here EC50 means the effective concentration where the effect is 50% of maximal. This value of 1.3 nano molar is a very low concentration for a drug, meaning it is highly effective. TP53 is another cancer-driving mutation, common in treatment-resistant cancers. The drug has a characteristic and curious dosage behavior, as its effect decreases at higher concentrations. This is because each individual end of the molecule starts to bind and saturate targets independently, reducing the rate of linkage between the two target proteins, and thus the intended effect.

Chemical structure of TCIP1. The left side binds to BRD4, a regulator of cell suicide, while the right side binds to BCL6, an oncogene.

The authors did numerous controls with related chemicals, and tracked genes that were targeted by the novel chemical, all to show that the dramatic effects they were seeing were specifically caused by the linkage of the two chemical functions. Indeed, BCL6 represses its own transcription in the natural course of affairs, and the new drug reverses this behavior as well, inducing more of its own synthesis, which now potentiates the drug's lethal effect. While the authors did not show effectiveness in animals, they did show that TCIP1 is not toxic in mice. Neither did they show that TCIP1 is orally available, but administered it by injection. But even by this mode, it would, if effective, be a very exciting therapy. Not surprisingly, the authors report a long series of biotech industry ties (rooted at Stanford) and indicate that this technology is under license for drug development.

This approach is highly promising, and a significant advance in the field. It should allow increased flexibility in targeting all kinds of proteins that may or not cause disease, but are specific to or over-expressed in disease states, in order to address those diseases. It will allow increased flexibility in targeting apoptosis (cell suicide) pathways through numerous entry points, to have the same ultimate (and highly effective) therapeutic endpoint. It allows drugs to work at low concentrations, not needing to fully occupy or inhibit their targets. Many possible areas of therapy can be envisioned, but one is aging. By targeting and killing senescent cells, which are notorious for promoting aging, significant increases in lifespan and health are conceivable. 


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