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An enolase inhibitor for the targeted treatment of ENO1-deleted cancers

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2020-11-23

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Springer Science and Business Media LLC
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Lin, Yu-Hsi, Nikunj Satani, Naima Hammoudi, Victoria C. Yan, Yasaman Barekatain, Sunada Khadka, Jeffrey J. Ackroyd et al. "An enolase inhibitor for the targeted treatment of ENO1-deleted cancers." Nature Metabolism 2, no. 12 (2020): 1413-1426. DOI: 10.1038/s42255-020-00313-3

Abstract

Inhibiting glycolysis remains an aspirational approach for the treatment of cancer. We previously identified a subset of cancers harboring homozygous deletion of the glycolytic enzyme Enolase (ENO1) with exceptional sensitivity to inhibition of its redundant paralogue, ENO2, through a therapeutic strategy known as collateral lethality. Here, we show that a small molecule Enolase inhibitor, POMHEX, can selectively kill ENO1-deleted glioma cells at low nanomolar concentrations and eradicate intracranial orthotopic ENO1-deleted tumors in mice at doses well-tolerated in non-human primates. Our data provide in vivo proof-of-principal for the power of collateral lethality in precision oncology and demonstrate the utility of POMHEX for glycolysis inhibition with potential across a range of therapeutic settings.

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Cell Biology, Physiology (medical), Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism, Internal Medicine

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