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Abstract 4897: PRT543, a methyl transferase inhibitor, has potent anti-tumor activity against adenoid cystic carcinoma of salivary glands

Adenoid Cystic Carcinoma (ACC) is a rare but aggressive malignancy of salivary gland, associated with protracted clinical course and fatal outcome. Treatment modalities are restricted to surgery and/or adjuvant radiotherapy and patients develop recurrence and distant metastasis over time. The absenc...

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Published in:Cancer research (Chicago, Ill.) Ill.), 2023-04, Vol.83 (7_Supplement), p.4897-4897
Main Authors: Mishra, Vasudha, Singh, Alka, Chen, Xiangying, Korzinkin, Michael, Wing, Claudia, Sarkisova, Viktoria, Ozerova, Alexandra, Glushchenko, Oksana, Thodima, Venkat, Ito, Koichi, Scherle, Peggy, Lingen, Mark, Hasina, Rifat, Pearson, Alexander, Rosenberg, Ari, Zhavoronkov, Alex, Ruggeri, Bruce, Agrawal, Nishant, Izumchenko, Evgeny
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Adenoid Cystic Carcinoma (ACC) is a rare but aggressive malignancy of salivary gland, associated with protracted clinical course and fatal outcome. Treatment modalities are restricted to surgery and/or adjuvant radiotherapy and patients develop recurrence and distant metastasis over time. The absence of effective systematic therapy makes it incurable in advanced stage. ACC display an overall low mutation frequency, therefore very few actionable genetic alterations critical to the ACC development have been recognized. MYB fusion/overexpression is the most frequently found genetic alteration in ACC and is present in ~70% patients. This is followed by activating NOTCH mutations, reported in ~20% patients. Despite the presence of few targetable genetic alterations, recent studies revealed substantial transcriptomic heterogeneity amongst ACC tumors suggesting the role of epigenetic alterations in ACC oncogenesis. Symmetric dimethylation is an important epigenetic mechanism that regulates mRNA splicing, transcription, translation, cell cycle and oncogenic signaling pathways. Protein Arginine Methyl Transferase 5 (PRMT5) is a predominant enzyme for symmetric dimethylation among a family of 9 methyl transferases. In was suggested that PRMT5 plays a role in regulating tumor progression via modulation of MYC signaling, cancer stemness, and a wide array of additional cellular and transcriptional pro-oncogenic processes. While inhibition of PRMTs showed anti-oncogenic response in several preclinical tumor models and a subset of patients with advanced solid malignancies (including ACC), preclinical studies investigating the effect of PRMT5 blockade in ACC remain inadequate. In part, due to the scarcity of ACC specimens and limited availability of the experimental models. PRT543 is a selective and potent small molecule PRMT5 inhibitor that specifically targets PRMT5 among 37 methyl transferases. In the present study, we have investigated the effect this novel agent using a unique collection of ACC cell lines, organoids, and patient derived xenograft mouse models. To our knowledge, this is the first study investigating the therapeutic effect of PRT543 in several preclinical models of ACC. Specifically, we found that PRT543 has potent antitumor activity in in-vitro and in-vivo models with MYB expression and activating NOTCH mutations. Further, based on these observations, we have sequenced a collection of 50 ACC tumor samples to identify the subset of patients who may pot
ISSN:1538-7445
1538-7445
DOI:10.1158/1538-7445.AM2023-4897