Abstract

Abstract Dysregulation of autophagy, the lysosomal degradation of intracellular components, has been universally described in cancer. While activity of macroautophagy changes in a context-dependent manner in cancers, the upregulation of chaperone-mediated autophagy (CMA) is well-described in all solid tumors studied to date. Upregulated CMA directly contributes to both tumor growth and protection against anti-oncogenic interventions in cancers. Selective degradation of anti-oncogenic and pro-apoptotic proteins, such as mutant p53 and PUMA, misfolded proteins, and glycolytic enzymes by CMA allows for increased survival, reduced cell death, increased stress resistance, and enhancement of the Warburg effect in cancer cells, respectively. As such, inhibition of CMA is an attractive target for anti-cancer therapeutics, but the field currently lacks protein targets specific to CMA and selective CMA inhibitors. We have previously demonstrated the regulatory effect of retinoic acid receptor alpha (RARα) and its coregulator, nuclear receptor corepressor 1 (NCoR1), on CMA through transcriptional upregulation of the CMA effector proteins (Bourdenx et al. Cell 2021, Gomez-Sintes et al, Nat. Commun. 2022). Here, we identified a high NCoR1/RARα expression ratio in human non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) tumors compared to healthy lung tissue. We further illustrated a dependency on NCoR1 expression and its interaction with RARα to maintain high CMA activity in NSCLC cell lines. Provided the reliance on NCoR1 repression of RARα for high CMA activity in NSCLC, we hypothesized that small molecule targeting of the druggable NCoR1/RARα interaction to disrupt the interaction may result in suppression of CMA effector proteins and CMA inhibition. Through a series of in-silico screens for predicted NCoR1/RARα targeting, and functional screens for CMA inhibition, we identified CIM7, a first-in-class potent and selective CMA inhibitor. We validated CIM7 function through binding to RARα and subsequent disruption of NCoR1 binding, resulting in alterations to CMA-related gene expression. CIM7 inhibits CMA in vivo with no observed toxicity in normal tissues. We additionally demonstrated the therapeutic potential of CIM7 through its ability to reduce tumor growth in vivo in mouse NSCLC xenografts. Our findings support the NCoR1/RARα interaction as a major regulator of CMA in NSCLC and demonstrate the potential of pharmacologic CMA inhibition as an anti-cancer therapeutic strategy. Citation Format: Mericka McCabe, Rabia R. Khawaja, Rajanya Bhattacharyya, Antonio Diaz, Thomas P. Garner, Kristen Lindenau, Rebecca Sereda, Olaya Santiago-Fernández, Ana Maria Cuervo, Evripidis Gavathiotis. Pharmacological inhibition of chaperone-mediated autophagy via NCoR1/RARα targeting is effective against non-small cell lung cancer [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2024; Part 1 (Regular Abstracts); 2024 Apr 5-10; San Diego, CA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2024;84(6_Suppl):Abstract nr 2091.

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