Project Details
Description
PROJECT DESCRIPTION/ABSTRACT
MDM2 amplification occurs in 3.5% of all malignancies and in approximately 10% of several highly aggressive
malignancies, including glioblastoma. MDM2 is a critical negative regulator of the tumor suppressor p53, and
high-level MDM2 amplification results in functional inactivation of p53 and is a genomic-driver event in
tumorigenesis of these tumors. Even in tumors with ‘normal’ MDM2 expression, disruption of the MDM2/p53
pathway can trigger apoptosis. In this context, multiple pharmaceutical companies have developed potent
MDM2 inhibitors that are in advanced clinical development for a variety of malignancies. In our studies with a
highly potent MDM2 inhibitor from Boehringer Ingelheim (Brigimadlin; BI 907828), we found that MDM2-
amplified glioblastoma (GBM) and sarcomas are exquisitely sensitive to this drug. Specific to MDM2-amplified
tumors, drug treatment is associated with degradation of the pro-survival MCL1 protein and upregulation of
other pro-apoptotic proteins. Moreover, brigimadlin treatment results in suppression of multiple DNA repair
pathways that are critical for recovery from both endogenous and exogenous genotoxic stress. Based on these
observations, we hypothesize that the combination of enhanced apoptosis and an inability to repair DNA
damage creates a unique vulnerability of MDM2-amplified GBM to brigimadlin. We will test this in three Aims:
Aim 1: Evaluate mechanism of exquisite MDM2 inhibitor sensitivity in MDM2 amplified GBM
Aim 2: Define the effects of brigimadlin on cellular response to genotoxic stress
Aim 3: Evaluate strategies to enhance the therapeutic window for MDM2 inhibitors in GBM
Status | Active |
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Effective start/end date | 8/1/24 → 7/31/25 |
Funding
- National Cancer Institute: $458,021.00
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