Publication | Open Access
Repurposing antiparasitic antimonials to noncovalently rescue temperature-sensitive p53 mutations
33
Citations
68
References
2022
Year
Tumor BiologyDrug TargetingP53 MutationsMedicineDrug DiscoveryTumor Suppressor P53Molecular BiologyTumor TargetingAnti-cancer AgentTumor SuppressorPharmacologyRadiation OncologyAntiparasitic AntimonialsCancer ResearchBiomolecular EngineeringAntimony Dose
The tumor suppressor p53 is inactivated by over hundreds of heterogenous mutations in cancer. Here, we purposefully selected phenotypically reversible temperature-sensitive (TS) p53 mutations for pharmacological rescue with thermostability as the compound-screening readout. This rational screening identified antiparasitic drug potassium antimony tartrate (PAT) as an agent that can thermostabilize the representative TS mutant p53-V272M via noncovalent binding. PAT met the three basic criteria for a targeted drug: availability of a co-crystal structure, compatible structure-activity relationship, and intracellular target specificity, consequently exhibiting antitumor activity in a xenograft mouse model. At the antimony dose in clinical antiparasitic therapy, PAT effectively and specifically rescued p53-V272M in patient-derived primary leukemia cells in single-cell RNA sequencing. Further scanning of 815 frequent p53-missense mutations identified 65 potential PAT-treatable mutations, most of which were temperature sensitive. These results lay the groundwork for repurposing noncovalent antiparasitic antimonials for precisely treating cancers with the 65 p53 mutations.
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