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Prolyl-tRNA synthetase as a novel therapeutic target in multiple myeloma

Authors :
Keiji Kurata
Anna James-Bott
Mark A. Tye
Leona Yamamoto
Mehmet K. Samur
Yu-Tzu Tai
James Dunford
Catrine Johansson
Filiz Senbabaoglu
Martin Philpott
Charlotte Palmer
Karthik Ramasamy
Sarah Gooding
Mihaela Smilova
Giorgia Gaeta
Manman Guo
John C. Christianson
N. Connor Payne
Kritika Singh
Kubra Karagoz
Matthew E. Stokes
Maria Ortiz
Patrick Hagner
Anjan Thakurta
Adam Cribbs
Ralph Mazitschek
Teru Hideshima
Kenneth C. Anderson
Udo Oppermann
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Springer Nature, 2023.

Abstract

Multiple myeloma (MM) is a plasma cell malignancy characterised by aberrant production of immunoglobulins requiring survival mechanisms to adapt to proteotoxic stress. We here show that glutamyl-prolyl-tRNA synthetase (GluProRS) inhibition constitutes a novel therapeutic target. Genomic data suggest that GluProRS promotes disease progression and is associated with poor prognosis, while downregulation in MM cells triggers apoptosis. We developed NCP26, a novel ATP-competitive ProRS inhibitor that demonstrates significant anti-tumour activity in multiple in vitro and in vivo systems and overcomes metabolic adaptation observed with other inhibitor chemotypes. We demonstrate a complex phenotypic response involving protein quality control mechanisms that centers around the ribosome as an integrating hub. Using systems approaches, we identified multiple downregulated proline-rich motif-containing proteins as downstream effectors. These include CD138, transcription factors such as MYC, and transcription factor 3 (TCF3), which we establish as a novel determinant in MM pathobiology through functional and genomic validation. Our preclinical data therefore provide evidence that blockade of prolyl-aminoacylation evokes a complex pro-apoptotic response beyond the canonical integrated stress response and establish a framework for its evaluation in a clinical setting.

Subjects

Subjects :
Oncology
Hematology

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d0f9c0b318653ea9aa7dcfb4bce662e4