MRTX1719 Is an MTA-Cooperative PRMT5 Inhibitor That Exhibits Synthetic Lethality in Preclinical Models and Patients with <i>MTAP</i> -Deleted Cancer

Lars D. Engstrom(Mirati Therapeutics (United States)), Ruth Aranda(Mirati Therapeutics (United States)), Laura Waters(Mirati Therapeutics (United States)), Krystal Moya(Mirati Therapeutics (United States)), Vickie Bowcut(Mirati Therapeutics (United States)), Laura Vegar(Mirati Therapeutics (United States)), David Trinh(Mirati Therapeutics (United States)), Allan Hebbert(Mirati Therapeutics (United States)), Christopher R. Smith(Mirati Therapeutics (United States)), Svitlana Kulyk(Mirati Therapeutics (United States)), J. David Lawson(Mirati Therapeutics (United States)), Leo He(Neurocrine Biosciences (United States)), Laura D. Hover(Neurocrine Biosciences (United States)), Julio Fernandez-Banet(Neurocrine Biosciences (United States)), Jill Hallin(Mirati Therapeutics (United States)), Darin Vanderpool(Mirati Therapeutics (United States)), David M. Briere(Mirati Therapeutics (United States)), Alice Blaj(Mirati Therapeutics (United States)), Matthew A. Marx(Mirati Therapeutics (United States)), Jordi Rodón(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Michael Offin(Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center), Kathryn C. Arbour(Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center), Melissa L. Johnson(Tennessee Oncology), David J. Kwiatkowski(Harvard University), Pasi A. Jänne(Harvard University), Candace L. Haddox(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Kyriakos P. Papadopoulos(South Texas Accelerated Research Therapeutics), Jason T. Henry(HealthONE), Konstantinos Leventakos(Mayo Clinic), James G. Christensen(Mirati Therapeutics (United States)), Ronald Shazer(Mirati Therapeutics (United States)), Peter Olson(Mirati Therapeutics (United States))
Cancer Discovery
August 8, 2023
Cited by 189Open Access
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Abstract

Previous studies implicated protein arginine methyltransferase 5 (PRMT5) as a synthetic lethal target for MTAP-deleted (MTAP del) cancers; however, the pharmacologic characterization of small-molecule inhibitors that recapitulate the synthetic lethal phenotype has not been described. MRTX1719 selectively inhibited PRMT5 in the presence of MTA, which is elevated in MTAP del cancers, and inhibited PRMT5-dependent activity and cell viability with >70-fold selecti-vity in HCT116 MTAP del compared with HCT116 MTAP wild-type (WT) cells. MRTX1719 demonstrated dose-dependent antitumor activity and inhibition of PRMT5-dependent SDMA modification in MTAP del tumors. In contrast, MRTX1719 demonstrated minimal effects on SDMA and viability in MTAP WT tumor xenografts or hematopoietic cells. MRTX1719 demonstrated marked antitumor activity across a panel of xenograft models at well-tolerated doses. Early signs of clinical activity were observed including objective responses in patients with MTAP del melanoma, gallbladder adenocarcinoma, mesothelioma, non-small cell lung cancer, and malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumors from the phase I/II study. SIGNIFICANCE: PRMT5 was identified as a synthetic lethal target for MTAP del cancers; however, previous PRMT5 inhibitors do not selectively target this genotype. The differentiated binding mode of MRTX1719 leverages the elevated MTA in MTAP del cancers and represents a promising therapy for the ∼10% of patients with cancer with this biomarker. See related commentary by Mulvaney, p. 2310. This article is featured in Selected Articles from This Issue, p. 2293.


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