SUPPRESSING THE PI3Kgamma/AKT SIGNALLING PATHWAY FOR THE TREATMENT OF ACUTE MYELOID LEUKEMIA

Dose-limiting toxicity poses a major limitation to the clinical utility of targeted cancer therapies, often arising from target engagement in non-malignant tissues. This obstacle can be minimized by targeting cancer dependencies driven by proteins with tissue- and/or tumor-restricted expression. Here, the inventors show that in acute myeloid leukemia (AML), suppression of the myeloid-restricted PIK3CG/p110/�/�-PIK3R5/p101 axis blocks AKT signaling, compromises cell fitness, and sensitizes to established AML therapies. Importantly, the inventors find that existing small molecule inhibitors against PIK3CG are insufficient to achieve a sustained longterm anti-leukemic effect. To address this concern, the inventors developed a proteolysis targeting chimera (PROTAC) heterobifunctional molecule that specifically degrades PIK3CG and potently suppresses AML progression alone and in combination with venetoclax in human AML cell lines, primary AML patient samples, and syngeneic mouse models.

Patent Application number: European Procedure (Patents) (EPA) - 23 Oct. 2023 - 23 306 854.3
Inventors:
MARTIN Anthony; WOOD Kris
Publications:
Kelly LM, Rutter JC, Lin KH, Ling F, Duchmann M, Latour E, Arang N, Pasquer H, Ho Nhat D, Charles J, Killarney ST, Ang HX, Namor F, Culeux C, Lombard B, Loew D, Swaney DL, Krogan NJ, Brunel L, Carretero É, Verdié P, Amblard M, Fodil S, Huynh T, Sebert M, Adès L, Raffoux E, Fenouille N, Itzykson R, Lobry C, Benajiba L, Forget A, Martin AR, Wood KC, Puissant A. Targeting a lineage-specific PI3Kɣ-Akt signaling module in acute myeloid leukemia using a heterobifunctional degrader molecule. Nat Cancer. 2024 Jul;5(7):1082-1101. doi: 10.1038/s43018-024-00782-5. Epub 2024 May 30. PMID: 38816660.

Reference:

BIO23418-T1

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Patent filling date: 2023-10-23

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