DarwinHealth Scientists Publish Foundational Research Identifying Regulatory Mechanisms Controlling Cancer Cell States and Drug Response
PR87559
NEW YORK, Jan. 12, 2021 /PRNewswire=KYODO JBN/ --
DarwinHealth, Inc., a New York-based biotechnology and cancer drug discovery
company announces the January 11, 2021 online publication in Cell of a landmark
paper, "A Modular Master Regulator Landscape Controls Cancer Transcriptional
Identity,"(1,2) in which scientists from Columbia University and DarwinHealth
apply the VIPER (Virtual Inference of Protein activity by Enriched Regulon)
analysis algorithm to identify recurrent regulatory networks -- "tumor
checkpoints" -- operative across the pancancer subtype continuum.
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This research paper, with lead author Dr. Evan Paull, from the Department of
Systems Biology at Columbia University, in conjunction with DarwinHealth
Co-Founder, Professor Andrea Califano and Chief Scientific Officer, Dr. Mariano
Alvarez and other investigators, presents results and analyses, using a novel
Multi-Omics Master-Regulator Analysis framework (MOMA), that validates the
foundational paradigm informing DarwinHealth technologies.
The study, funded by the U.S. National Institutes of Health and the Instituto
de Salud Carlos III/Ministerio de Asuntos Economicos y Transformacion Digital
(Spain), demonstrates that different genetic alterations in individual patients
within the same tumor subtype induce aberrant activation of the same Master
Regulator proteins, which maintain the subtype's transcriptional identity.
Moreover, it shows that Master Regulators operate within small, hyperconnected
modules (Master Regulator Blocks [MRBs]) that mechanistically control key
cancer hallmarks necessary for the survival of the cancer cell.
The results reported in Cell provide one of the most comprehensive
confirmations to date of the value of proprietary, network-based approaches for
the identification of therapeutic targets in cancer using VIPER technology. The
latter has been exclusively licensed, for commercial use, to DarwinHealth by
Columbia University. The Cell publication concludes that, "Taken together,
these data suggest that MRBs may provide complementary 'molecular recipes' for
implementing the same cancer hallmarks in different tumor contexts."
"These data support the Oncotecture Hypothesis, which suggests that a much
larger and finer grain mutational repertoire than previously suspected may be
responsible for inducing aberrant MR activity and implementing transcriptional
tumor identities," explains Dr. Califano. "The results presented by this
multi-disciplinary team also confirm that Tumor Checkpoint-based Master
Regulators implement regulatory bottlenecks in cancer that are responsible for
canalizing the effect of multiple functional mutations." He adds that,
"Importantly, the Tumor Checkpoints that define each subtype can thus be
deconstructed into highly specific combinations of a handful of activated and
inactivated Master Regulator-Blocks -- specifically, 24 identified in this
study. The MRBs can potentially regulate complementary genetic programs
required to implement and maintain a tumor cell's transcriptional identity,
which undergirds key aspects of cancer cell behavior and determines
susceptibility to specific drugs and therapeutic interventions."
The study provides a data-driven roadmap for identifying potential therapeutic
targets that may benefit a large subset of cancer patients within each one of
112 tumor subtypes, independent of their mutational state, characterized by the
analysis. Accordingly, the authors note that, "Consistent with the notion that
transcriptional cell states have emerged as more accurate predictors of
drug-sensitivity compared to genetics, this suggests that MR-based analyses may
produce a more tractable landscape of potential therapeutic targets than what
could be achieved by genetic-based approaches."
These research findings and planned follow-up studies are likely to change the
trajectory of classification schemes for cancer and evolving approaches to
precision-based drug discovery in a number of important ways. The methodologies
and results reported in Cell introduce to the cancer research and clinical
community an entirely new approach for taxonomizing cancer subtypes --
essentially, categorizing them according to the composition of downstream
regulatory bottlenecks with unique compositions of MRBs representing targetable
tumor dependencies, independent of canonical mutational signatures. In fact,
ongoing studies suggest these MR-based, tumor checkpoints are more reliable
off-on switches for cancer cell governance than mutations themselves.
Accordingly, this novel, data-driven taxonomization of molecular species (i.e.,
MR proteins comprising tumor checkpoints) responsible for cancer cell behavior
-- and susceptibility to therapeutic targeting -- represents a paradigmatic
shift opening up multiple avenues of inquiry and applications that have
translational impact at the front lines of clinical care for cancer patients.
Dr. Gideon Bosker, DarwinHealth CEO, notes, "The new molecular classification
reported in Cell sets the stage for identifying and testing drugs that can
induce a state of 'regulatory network contraception,' that is, disable or
disrupt formation of checkpoint-governed programs that maintain and perpetuate
the cancer cell state."
Importantly, the identification of Master Regulators has been made possible by
the VIPER technology, developed by Califano and Alvarez at Columbia and
licensed exclusively to DarwinHealth. VIPER allows precise measurement of
protein activity from inexpensive and easily-accessible gene expression
profiles -- as measured by mRNA sequencing. Much like thermostats maintain a
constant room temperature, the VIPER-inferred Master Regulators coalesce into
complex auto-regulated modules -- the tumor checkpoints -- that are necessary
and sufficient to maintain a consistently programmed malignant state of the
cancer cell over time.
"The coordinated activity of Master Regulator proteins comprising the tumor
checkpoint activates key hallmark programs needed by the cancer cell," explains
Dr. Alvarez, DarwinHealth CSO. "Among them are those controlling unchecked
proliferation, migration, and metastatic progression -- while suppressing other
hallmark functions controlling programmed cell death (or apoptosis) and immune
system detection; as well as others, which would otherwise prevent tumor
formation. Essentially, by channeling genetic and mutational information into a
discrete downstream regulatory nexus, the Master Regulators in a tumor checkpoint
initiate and maintain the biological and behavioral hallmarks of a cancer cell."
"At DarwinHealth, we use the full spectrum of proprietary, patented VIPER-based
technologies developed by our scientists and co-founders to accurately and
reproducibly quantify the activity of Master Regulators," explained Dr. Bosker.
"From an actionable and real world precision oncology perspective, we have
developed specific VIPER-based diagnostic tests, including DarwinOncoTreat and
DarwinOncoTarget, to pinpoint drugs that can invert the activity of an entire
tumor checkpoint or of specific master regulators. These algorithms have
received New York and California CLIA certification and are being used
clinically, including in several ongoing clinical trials." The first clinical
trial based on this technology, which employed the combination of the HDAC6
inhibitor ricolinostat and NAB-paclitaxel, has shown virtually 100% accuracy in
the prediction of responders and non-responders as reported in a recent manuscript
currently under review and available on MedRxiv (medRxiv 2020.04.23.20066928).
DarwinHealth's oncotecture-based, "digging deeper than genes" discovery
framework and associated technologies described in the Cell paper will continue
to exploit a complementary combination of experimental and computation-based,
inferential methods to identify novel cancer targets, effective drugs and
biomarkers on a fully mechanistic, rather than empirical basis, in line with
the strategies reported Cell.
In addition, the company's drug and novel cancer target discovery programs,
including the DarwinOncoMarker, Compound-2-Clinic (C2C), and novel cancer
target initiative (NCTI) platforms allow its scientific teams, working either
independently or in collaboration with biopharmaceutical partners, to target
cancer at its most vulnerable and stable spots; more specifically, at the
regulatory interfaces implemented by tumor checkpoints.
These DarwinHealth technologies and methods, already widely published in
leading scientific and medical journals, are currently being evaluated in
numerous clinical trials across the globe. By using Master Regulator-based
analyses and leveraging their capacity for dissecting more actionable
therapeutic targets -- and by extension, discovering more effective drugs --
than could be achieved by genetic-based approaches alone, these validated
approaches are expected to address the precision deficit shortfalls associated
with more traditional, mutation-centric approaches to precision oncology, many
of which have failed to fully deliver on their initial promise.
About DarwinHealth
DarwinHealth: Precision Therapeutics for Cancer Medicine is a "frontiers of
cancer," biotechnology-focused company, co-founded by CEO Gideon Bosker, MD,
and Professor Andrea Califano, Clyde and Helen Wu Professor of Chemical Systems
Biology and Chair, Department of Systems Biology at Columbia University. The
company's technology was developed by the Califano lab over the past 15 years
and is exclusively licensed from Columbia University.
DarwinHealth utilizes proprietary, systems biology algorithms to match
virtually every cancer patient with the drugs and drug combinations that are
most likely to produce a successful treatment outcome. "Conversely, these same
algorithms also can prioritize investigational drugs and compound combinations
of unknown potential against a full spectrum of human malignancies, as well as
novel cancer targets," explained Dr. Bosker, "which make them invaluable for
pharmaceutical companies seeking to both optimize their compound pipelines and
discover mechanistically actionable, novel cancer targets and compound-tumor alignments."
DarwinHealth's mission statement is to deploy novel technologies rooted in
systems biology to improve clinical outcomes of cancer treatment. Its core
technology, the VIPER algorithm, can identify tightly knit modules of master
regulator proteins that represent a new class of actionable therapeutic targets
in cancer. The methodology is applied along two complementary axes: First,
DarwinHealth's technologies support the systematic identification and
validation of druggable targets at a more foundational, deep state of the
cancer cell's regulatory logic so we and our scientific partners can exploit
next generation actionability based on fundamental and more universal tumor
dependencies and mechanisms. Second, from a drug development and discovery
perspective, the same technologies are capable of identifying potentially
druggable novel targets based on master regulators, and upstream modulators of
those targets. This is where the DarwinHealth oncotectural approach, with its
emphasis on elucidating and targeting tumor checkpoints, provides its most
important solutions and repositioning roadmaps for advancing precision-focused
cancer drug discovery and therapeutics.
The proprietary, precision medicine-based methods employed by DarwinHealth are
supported by a deep body of scientific literature authored by its scientific
leadership, including DarwinHealth CSO, Mariano Alvarez, PhD, who co-developed
the company's critical computational infrastructure. These proprietary
strategies leverage the ability to reverse-engineer and analyze the genome-wide
regulatory and signaling logic of the cancer cell, by integrating data from in
silico, in vitro, and in vivo assays. This provides a fully integrated drug
characterization and discovery platform designed to elucidate, accelerate, and
validate precise developmental trajectories for pharmaceutical assets, so their
full clinical and commercial potential can be realized. For more information,
please visit: www.DarwinHealth.com.
(1)Cell 184, 1–18, January 21, 2021 (print version)
(2)Cell (online pub, January 11, 2021),
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0092867420316172?dgcid=author
SOURCE DarwinHealth
CONTACT: Gideon Bosker, MD, CEO, DarwinHealth, Inc., Email:
GBosker@DarwinHealth.com, Phone: (1) 503-880-2207
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