Discovering the anticancer potential of non-oncology drugs by systematic viability profiling

SM Corsello, RT Nagari, RD Spangler, J Rossen… - Nature cancer, 2020 - nature.com
SM Corsello, RT Nagari, RD Spangler, J Rossen, M Kocak, JG Bryan, R Humeidi, D Peck…
Nature cancer, 2020nature.com
Anticancer uses of non-oncology drugs have occasionally been found, but such discoveries
have been serendipitous. We sought to create a public resource containing the growth-
inhibitory activity of 4,518 drugs tested across 578 human cancer cell lines. We used PRISM
(profiling relative inhibition simultaneously in mixtures), a molecular barcoding method, to
screen drugs against cell lines in pools. An unexpectedly large number of non-oncology
drugs selectively inhibited subsets of cancer cell lines in a manner predictable from the …
Abstract
Anticancer uses of non-oncology drugs have occasionally been found, but such discoveries have been serendipitous. We sought to create a public resource containing the growth-inhibitory activity of 4,518 drugs tested across 578 human cancer cell lines. We used PRISM (profiling relative inhibition simultaneously in mixtures), a molecular barcoding method, to screen drugs against cell lines in pools. An unexpectedly large number of non-oncology drugs selectively inhibited subsets of cancer cell lines in a manner predictable from the molecular features of the cell lines. Our findings include compounds that killed by inducing phosphodiesterase 3A-Schlafen 12 complex formation, vanadium-containing compounds whose killing depended on the sulfate transporter SLC26A2, the alcohol dependence drug disulfiram, which killed cells with low expression of metallothioneins, and the anti-inflammatory drug tepoxalin, which killed via the multidrug resistance protein ATP-binding cassette subfamily B member 1 (ABCB1). The PRISM drug repurposing resource (https://depmap.org/repurposing) is a starting point to develop new oncology therapeutics, and more rarely, for potential direct clinical translation.
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