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[Preprint]. 2024 Nov 6:2024.11.05.622009. [Version 1] doi: 10.1101/2024.11.05.622009

Discovery of A Chimeric Polyketide Family as Cancer Immunogenic Chemotherapeutic Leads

Dan Xue, Mingming Xu, Michael D Madden, Xiaoying Lian, Ethan A Older, Conor Pulliam, Yvonne Hui, Zhuo Shang, Gourab Gupta, Manikanda K Raja, Yuzhen Wang, Armando Sardi, Yaoling Long, Hexin Chen, Daping Fan, Tim S Bugni, Traci L Testerman, Qihao Wu, Jie Li
PMCID: PMC11580922  PMID: 39574732

Abstract

Discovery of cancer immunogenic chemotherapeutics represents an emerging, highly promising direction for cancer treatment that uses a chemical drug to achieve the efficacy of both chemotherapy and immunotherapy. Herein we report a high-throughput screening platform and the subsequent discovery of a new class of cancer immunogenic chemotherapeutic leads. Our platform integrates informatics-based activity metabolomics for rapid identification of microbial natural products with both novel structures and potent activities. Additionally, we demonstrate the use of microcrystal electron diffraction (MicroED) for direct structure elucidation of the lead compounds from partially purified mixtures. Using this strategy to screen geographically and phylogenetically diverse microbial metabolites against pseudomyxoma peritonei, a rare and severe cancer, we discovered a new class of leads, aspercyclicins. The aspercyclicins feature an unprecedented tightly packed polycyclic polyketide scaffold that comprises continuous fused, bridged, and spiro rings. The biogenesis of aspercyclicins involves two distinct biosynthetic pathways, leading to formation of chimeric compounds that cannot be predicted by bottom-up approaches mining natural products biosynthetic genes. With comparable potency to some clinically used anticancer drugs, aspercyclicins are active against multiple cancer cell types by inducing immunogenic cell death (ICD), including the release of damage-associated molecular patterns and subsequent phagocytosis of cancer cells. The broad-spectrum ICD-inducing activity of aspercyclicins, combined with their low toxicity to normal cells, represents a new class of potential cancer immunogenic chemotherapeutics and particularly the first drug lead for pseudomyxoma peritonei treatment.

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