Cargando…

OMRT-13. Delivery of Ubidecarenone (BPM 31510) to mitochondria effectuates metabolic reprogramming and redox activated apoptosis in Glioblastoma

GBM is a highly metabolic cancer phenotype that confers sustained growth and evasion of cell death mechanism via mitochondrial dysregulation. Efforts to re-engage mitochondrial metabolism via anti-cancer therapeutics has not been successful. BPM 31510 is a CoQ10-lipid conjugate nanodispersion for de...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Sarangarajan, Rangaprasad, Nagpal, Seema, Sun, Jiaxin, Diers, Anne, Shah, Punit, Tolstikov, Vladimir, Miller, Gregory, Vishnudas, Vivek, Gesta, Stephane, Kiebish, Michael, Granger, Elder, Narain, Niven, Recht, Lawrence
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8255450/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/noajnl/vdab070.037
_version_ 1783717908211302400
author Sarangarajan, Rangaprasad
Nagpal, Seema
Sun, Jiaxin
Diers, Anne
Shah, Punit
Tolstikov, Vladimir
Miller, Gregory
Vishnudas, Vivek
Gesta, Stephane
Kiebish, Michael
Granger, Elder
Narain, Niven
Recht, Lawrence
author_facet Sarangarajan, Rangaprasad
Nagpal, Seema
Sun, Jiaxin
Diers, Anne
Shah, Punit
Tolstikov, Vladimir
Miller, Gregory
Vishnudas, Vivek
Gesta, Stephane
Kiebish, Michael
Granger, Elder
Narain, Niven
Recht, Lawrence
author_sort Sarangarajan, Rangaprasad
collection PubMed
description GBM is a highly metabolic cancer phenotype that confers sustained growth and evasion of cell death mechanism via mitochondrial dysregulation. Efforts to re-engage mitochondrial metabolism via anti-cancer therapeutics has not been successful. BPM 31510 is a CoQ10-lipid conjugate nanodispersion for delivery of CoQ10 preferentially to mitochondria of human cells. BPM has demonstrated anti-cancer effects across multiple cancers, without adversely affecting normal tissue. The anti-cancer mechanism of CoQ10 was elucidated by Interrogative Biology, a data-driven approach to understand disease biology, identify targets and biomarkers of disease. Specifically, oncogenic and corresponding non-disease normal cell-based models (e.g. breast, liver, prostate, kidney) were subjected to cancer specific perturbations (e.g. hypoxia, metabolic stress). Comprehensive multi-omic (genome, proteome, lipidome, metabolome) and functional endpoints data were profiled. A Bayesian artificial intelligence analytics was used to generate network models in a data driven manner to identify BPM 31510 mechanism (i.e. shift in oxygen and glucose utilization, increase in oxidative stress and apoptosis in cancer cells). BPM 31510 re-capitulated its anti-cancer effect in GBM models, including LN-229 xenograft and C6 glioma allograft, both as monotherapy and in combination with temozolomide (TMZ)/radiation. The platform generated network maps from longitudinal pharmacodynamic samples (20 samples/28 days) collected from GBM patient refractory to TMZ/radiation/bevacizumab (Phase 1, NCT03020602, Stanford) identified alterations in intermediary metabolism as drivers of Progression Free Survival (PFS) and Overall Survival (OS) in response to BPM 31510 treatment. The platform supports the ongoing Phase 2 trial of adjuvant BPM 31510 plus TMZ/radiation in newly diagnosed GBM patients and potential accelerated approval.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8255450
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher Oxford University Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-82554502021-07-06 OMRT-13. Delivery of Ubidecarenone (BPM 31510) to mitochondria effectuates metabolic reprogramming and redox activated apoptosis in Glioblastoma Sarangarajan, Rangaprasad Nagpal, Seema Sun, Jiaxin Diers, Anne Shah, Punit Tolstikov, Vladimir Miller, Gregory Vishnudas, Vivek Gesta, Stephane Kiebish, Michael Granger, Elder Narain, Niven Recht, Lawrence Neurooncol Adv Supplement Abstracts GBM is a highly metabolic cancer phenotype that confers sustained growth and evasion of cell death mechanism via mitochondrial dysregulation. Efforts to re-engage mitochondrial metabolism via anti-cancer therapeutics has not been successful. BPM 31510 is a CoQ10-lipid conjugate nanodispersion for delivery of CoQ10 preferentially to mitochondria of human cells. BPM has demonstrated anti-cancer effects across multiple cancers, without adversely affecting normal tissue. The anti-cancer mechanism of CoQ10 was elucidated by Interrogative Biology, a data-driven approach to understand disease biology, identify targets and biomarkers of disease. Specifically, oncogenic and corresponding non-disease normal cell-based models (e.g. breast, liver, prostate, kidney) were subjected to cancer specific perturbations (e.g. hypoxia, metabolic stress). Comprehensive multi-omic (genome, proteome, lipidome, metabolome) and functional endpoints data were profiled. A Bayesian artificial intelligence analytics was used to generate network models in a data driven manner to identify BPM 31510 mechanism (i.e. shift in oxygen and glucose utilization, increase in oxidative stress and apoptosis in cancer cells). BPM 31510 re-capitulated its anti-cancer effect in GBM models, including LN-229 xenograft and C6 glioma allograft, both as monotherapy and in combination with temozolomide (TMZ)/radiation. The platform generated network maps from longitudinal pharmacodynamic samples (20 samples/28 days) collected from GBM patient refractory to TMZ/radiation/bevacizumab (Phase 1, NCT03020602, Stanford) identified alterations in intermediary metabolism as drivers of Progression Free Survival (PFS) and Overall Survival (OS) in response to BPM 31510 treatment. The platform supports the ongoing Phase 2 trial of adjuvant BPM 31510 plus TMZ/radiation in newly diagnosed GBM patients and potential accelerated approval. Oxford University Press 2021-07-05 /pmc/articles/PMC8255450/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/noajnl/vdab070.037 Text en © The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press, the Society for Neuro-Oncology and the European Association of Neuro-Oncology. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) ), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Supplement Abstracts
Sarangarajan, Rangaprasad
Nagpal, Seema
Sun, Jiaxin
Diers, Anne
Shah, Punit
Tolstikov, Vladimir
Miller, Gregory
Vishnudas, Vivek
Gesta, Stephane
Kiebish, Michael
Granger, Elder
Narain, Niven
Recht, Lawrence
OMRT-13. Delivery of Ubidecarenone (BPM 31510) to mitochondria effectuates metabolic reprogramming and redox activated apoptosis in Glioblastoma
title OMRT-13. Delivery of Ubidecarenone (BPM 31510) to mitochondria effectuates metabolic reprogramming and redox activated apoptosis in Glioblastoma
title_full OMRT-13. Delivery of Ubidecarenone (BPM 31510) to mitochondria effectuates metabolic reprogramming and redox activated apoptosis in Glioblastoma
title_fullStr OMRT-13. Delivery of Ubidecarenone (BPM 31510) to mitochondria effectuates metabolic reprogramming and redox activated apoptosis in Glioblastoma
title_full_unstemmed OMRT-13. Delivery of Ubidecarenone (BPM 31510) to mitochondria effectuates metabolic reprogramming and redox activated apoptosis in Glioblastoma
title_short OMRT-13. Delivery of Ubidecarenone (BPM 31510) to mitochondria effectuates metabolic reprogramming and redox activated apoptosis in Glioblastoma
title_sort omrt-13. delivery of ubidecarenone (bpm 31510) to mitochondria effectuates metabolic reprogramming and redox activated apoptosis in glioblastoma
topic Supplement Abstracts
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8255450/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/noajnl/vdab070.037
work_keys_str_mv AT sarangarajanrangaprasad omrt13deliveryofubidecarenonebpm31510tomitochondriaeffectuatesmetabolicreprogrammingandredoxactivatedapoptosisinglioblastoma
AT nagpalseema omrt13deliveryofubidecarenonebpm31510tomitochondriaeffectuatesmetabolicreprogrammingandredoxactivatedapoptosisinglioblastoma
AT sunjiaxin omrt13deliveryofubidecarenonebpm31510tomitochondriaeffectuatesmetabolicreprogrammingandredoxactivatedapoptosisinglioblastoma
AT diersanne omrt13deliveryofubidecarenonebpm31510tomitochondriaeffectuatesmetabolicreprogrammingandredoxactivatedapoptosisinglioblastoma
AT shahpunit omrt13deliveryofubidecarenonebpm31510tomitochondriaeffectuatesmetabolicreprogrammingandredoxactivatedapoptosisinglioblastoma
AT tolstikovvladimir omrt13deliveryofubidecarenonebpm31510tomitochondriaeffectuatesmetabolicreprogrammingandredoxactivatedapoptosisinglioblastoma
AT millergregory omrt13deliveryofubidecarenonebpm31510tomitochondriaeffectuatesmetabolicreprogrammingandredoxactivatedapoptosisinglioblastoma
AT vishnudasvivek omrt13deliveryofubidecarenonebpm31510tomitochondriaeffectuatesmetabolicreprogrammingandredoxactivatedapoptosisinglioblastoma
AT gestastephane omrt13deliveryofubidecarenonebpm31510tomitochondriaeffectuatesmetabolicreprogrammingandredoxactivatedapoptosisinglioblastoma
AT kiebishmichael omrt13deliveryofubidecarenonebpm31510tomitochondriaeffectuatesmetabolicreprogrammingandredoxactivatedapoptosisinglioblastoma
AT grangerelder omrt13deliveryofubidecarenonebpm31510tomitochondriaeffectuatesmetabolicreprogrammingandredoxactivatedapoptosisinglioblastoma
AT narainniven omrt13deliveryofubidecarenonebpm31510tomitochondriaeffectuatesmetabolicreprogrammingandredoxactivatedapoptosisinglioblastoma
AT rechtlawrence omrt13deliveryofubidecarenonebpm31510tomitochondriaeffectuatesmetabolicreprogrammingandredoxactivatedapoptosisinglioblastoma