Robert Svensson,Seth J. Parker,Lillian J. Eichner,Matthew J. Kolar,Martina Wallace,Sonja N. Brun,Portia S. Lombardo,Jeanine L. Van Nostrand,Amanda Hutchins,Lilliana Vera,Laurie Gerken,Jeremy R. Greenwood,Sathesh Bhat,Geraldine Harriman,William Westlin,H. James Harwood,Alan Saghatelian,Rosana Kapeller,Christian M. Metallo,Reuben J. Shaw
出处
期刊:Nature Medicine [Springer Nature] 日期:2016-09-19卷期号:22 (10): 1108-1119被引量:395
Continuous de novo fatty acid synthesis is a common feature of cancer that is required to meet the biosynthetic demands of a growing tumor. This process is controlled by the rate-limiting enzyme acetyl-CoA carboxylase (ACC), an attractive but traditionally intractable drug target. Here we provide genetic and pharmacological evidence that in preclinical models ACC is required to maintain the de novo fatty acid synthesis needed for growth and viability of non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) cells. We describe the ability of ND-646-an allosteric inhibitor of the ACC enzymes ACC1 and ACC2 that prevents ACC subunit dimerization-to suppress fatty acid synthesis in vitro and in vivo. Chronic ND-646 treatment of xenograft and genetically engineered mouse models of NSCLC inhibited tumor growth. When administered as a single agent or in combination with the standard-of-care drug carboplatin, ND-646 markedly suppressed lung tumor growth in the Kras;Trp53