Glioblastomas (GBMs) are among the most deadly cancers known, with only limited improvements in treatment outcomes despite extensive efforts. GBMs exhibit resistance to chemotherapeutic agents, irradiation and other cell death inducers, colonize brain tissue far removed from the tumor's primary origin, and exhibit intrinsic intra-tumor heterogeneity, the presence of a robust tumor initiating cell (TIC) compartment and multiple other obstacles to treatment. Still a further significant challenge in developing effective GBM treatments is that normal CNS progenitor cells and oligodendrocytes are more vulnerable to most anticancer therapies than are cancer cells themselves. Adverse neurological side effects of cancer treatment are increasingly recognized as important problems, thus emphasizing the importance of developing treatments that are selectively toxic for transformed cells. While some new therapies offer benefit to a subset of individuals, with ongoing efforts to better identify such individuals in advance, most GBM patients remain without effective treatment. Thus, development of therapies that can overcome the multiple mechanisms of therapeutic resistance of GBM cells without causing unacceptable toxicity to normal cells of the CNS is thus a central need in this field. The central hypotheses of this research are that (i) restoring the ability to activate the c-Cbl ubiquitin ligase in GBM cells, and in particular using a non-canonical oxidation pathway to activate c-Cbl, enables targeting of multiple critical regulators of GBM cells with a single therapeutic intervention; (ii) agents that restore c-Cbl function in GBM cells can be identified by mechanism-based drug repurposing; (iii) c-Cbl restoration therapies provide a foundation for rational combinatorial treatments that are more toxic for GBM cells than for normal glial progenitors; (iv) this approach provides clinically relevant therapies that re effective in treating established human GBMs growing intra-cranially in immune-deficient NSG mice; and (v) it is possible to prospectively identify GBMs that are likely to respond to specific therapies developed in this research. Preliminary data to support each of these hypotheses is provided, To further develop this promising avenue of investigation, we now propose the following aims:
Aim 1 tests the hypothesis that candidate CRAs (of which we thus far have ten) increase sensitivity to compounds relevant to GBM treatment, enable simultaneous targeting of multiple proteins and biological activities critical in GBM cell function and tumor generation and achieves these outcomes without increasing the sensitivity of normal glial progenitor cells to relevant therapeutic agents.
Aim 2 tests the hypothesis that CRA-based therapies enable effective treatment of human GBMs, growing in immunodeficient mice, in a clinically relevant manner.
Aim 3 tests the hypothesis that the presence of complexes between c-Cbl and Cool-1/-pix predicts sensitivity to our CRA-based therapies, thus potentially enabling prospective identification of tumors most likely to be responsive to these approaches.
This research program is focused on mechanism-based discovery of means of more effectively treating glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) the most malignant of brain tumors. These goals are enabled by our discovery of a new disruption of normal pathway regulation in GBMs that has the dual roles of providing a previously unknown path to chemoresistance and that also is necessary for function of cells able to initiate tumor generation. Our research also provides strategies relevant to optimization of combination therapies for GBM and identification of patients most likely to benefit from specific combinatorial strategies, and also appears to enhance killing of GBM cells without enhancing the vulnerability of the normal cells of the brain.