The PARP Inhibitor AZD2461 Provides Insights into the Role of PARP3 Inhibition for Both Synthetic Lethality and Tolerability with Chemotherapy in Preclinical Models.
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BORIS DOI
Date of Publication
October 15, 2016
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute
Author
Oplustil O'Connor, Lenka | |
Rulten, Stuart L | |
Cranston, Aaron N | |
Odedra, Rajesh | |
Brown, Henry | |
Jaspers, Janneke E | |
Jones, Louise | |
Knights, Charlotte | |
Evers, Bastiaan | |
Ting, Attilla | |
Bradbury, Robert H | |
Pajic, Marina | |
Jonkers, Jos | |
Rudge, David | |
Martin, Niall M B | |
Caldecott, Keith W | |
Lau, Alan | |
O'Connor, Mark J |
Series
Cancer research
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
0008-5472
Publisher
American Association for Cancer Research AACR
Language
English
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
27550455
Description
The PARP inhibitor AZD2461 was developed as a next-generation agent following olaparib, the first PARP inhibitor approved for cancer therapy. In BRCA1-deficient mouse models, olaparib resistance predominantly involves overexpression of P-glycoprotein, so AZD2461 was developed as a poor substrate for drug transporters. Here we demonstrate the efficacy of this compound against olaparib-resistant tumors that overexpress P-glycoprotein. In addition, AZD2461 was better tolerated in combination with chemotherapy than olaparib in mice, which suggests that AZD2461 could have significant advantages over olaparib in the clinic. However, this superior toxicity profile did not extend to rats. Investigations of this difference revealed a differential PARP3 inhibitory activity for each compound and a higher level of PARP3 expression in bone marrow cells from mice as compared with rats and humans. Our findings have implications for the use of mouse models to assess bone marrow toxicity for DNA-damaging agents and inhibitors of the DNA damage response. Finally, structural modeling of the PARP3-active site with different PARP inhibitors also highlights the potential to develop compounds with different PARP family member specificity profiles for optimal antitumor activity and tolerability. Cancer Res; 76(20); 6084-94. ©2016 AACR.