作者
Tilman Oltersdorf,Steven W. Elmore,Alexander R. Shoemaker,Robert C. Armstrong,David J. Augeri,Barbara Belli,Milan Bruncko,Thomas L. Deckwerth,Jürgen Dinges,Philip J. Hajduk,Mary K. Joseph,Shinichi Kitada,Stanley J. Korsmeyer,Aaron Kunzer,Anthony Letai,Chi Li,Michael J. Mitten,David G. Nettesheim,Shi-Chung Ng,Paul Nimmer,Jacqueline M. O’Connor,Anatol Oleksijew,Andrew M. Petros,John C. Reed,Shen Wang,Stephen K. Tahir,Craig B. Thompson,Kevin J. Tomaselli,Baole Wang,Michael Wendt,Haichao Zhang,Stephen W. Fesik,Saul H. Rosenberg
摘要
Proteins in the Bcl-2 family are central regulators of programmed cell death, and members that inhibit apoptosis, such as Bcl-X(L) and Bcl-2, are overexpressed in many cancers and contribute to tumour initiation, progression and resistance to therapy. Bcl-X(L) expression correlates with chemo-resistance of tumour cell lines, and reductions in Bcl-2 increase sensitivity to anticancer drugs and enhance in vivo survival. The development of inhibitors of these proteins as potential anti-cancer therapeutics has been previously explored, but obtaining potent small-molecule inhibitors has proved difficult owing to the necessity of targeting a protein-protein interaction. Here, using nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR)-based screening, parallel synthesis and structure-based design, we have discovered ABT-737, a small-molecule inhibitor of the anti-apoptotic proteins Bcl-2, Bcl-X(L) and Bcl-w, with an affinity two to three orders of magnitude more potent than previously reported compounds. Mechanistic studies reveal that ABT-737 does not directly initiate the apoptotic process, but enhances the effects of death signals, displaying synergistic cytotoxicity with chemotherapeutics and radiation. ABT-737 exhibits single-agent-mechanism-based killing of cells from lymphoma and small-cell lung carcinoma lines, as well as primary patient-derived cells, and in animal models, ABT-737 improves survival, causes regression of established tumours, and produces cures in a high percentage of the mice.