# Mechanistic biomarkers to enable Bcl2 inhibitor therapies for neuroblastoma

> **NIH NIH R01** · CHILDREN'S HOSP OF PHILADELPHIA · 2021 · $423,029

## Abstract

Project Summary
 Drugs that inhibit Bcl2-family survival proteins promise to change the landscape of cancer care. Cancers
activate stress signals in the form of BH3-domain proteins like Bim as they escape cellular growth constraints
and invade hostile environments. To remain viable, tumors use survival proteins like Bcl2, Bclx, Bclw and Mcl1
to sequester these BH3 proteins through specific protein-protein interactions (PPIs). This blocks their apoptotic
signal but also renders such tumors continually dependent on this function. Drugs that competitively displace
BH3 proteins from the survival protein sequestering them unleash a potent apoptotic signal. Indeed, venetoclax
is a Bcl2 inhibitor that has demonstrated striking clinical efficacy, garnering FDA-approval for the treatment of
chronic lymphocytic and adult myelogenous leukemias.These tumor types do not have Bcl2-activatingmutations
but are empirically defined to be dependent on Bcl2 for their survival. In contrast, many solid tumors have
heterogeneity in which survival protein they use to block BH3 signals, and the absence of biomarkers that predict
sensitivity to this emerging drug class remains a barrier. Our objectives are to identify predictive biomarkers and
develop diagnostic tools to leverage Bcl2-family inhibitors for clinical use. We created a national infrastructure to
generate patient-derivedxenograftand cell line models of the lethal childhood tumor, neuroblastoma, and utilized
innovative functional assays to define the Bcl2-family protein they depend on for survival. We discovered that
neuroblastomas have endogenously activated Bim neutralized through a PPI with a single dominant survival
protein. This sequesters Bim's apoptotic activity, but also encodes a continual dependency, and defines a
mechanistic biomarker defining the survival protein required for viability. An unanticipated finding is that this
survival dependency is highly cancer cell intrinsic and stable: consistent in patient-matched tumors from primary
and metastatic sites, and at diagnosis and relapse. In tumors with Bim bound by Bcl2 (Bim:Bcl2 PPI), Bcl2
inhibitors like venetoclax are highly active in vitro and in vivo. In tumors with Bim bound by Mcl1 (Bim:Mcl1 PPI),
Bcl2 inhibitors have no activity. Further, we find that all neuroblastomas with MAPK pathway mutations are in
the Bim:Mcl1 class. Surprisingly, Mcl1 inhibitors also have no activity for this subset, despite displacing Bim from
Mcl1. In these tumors, Bim is re-sequestered by Bclx, and all are exquisitely sensitive to combined Mcl1/Bclx
inhibition. This demonstrates the robustness of our predictive Bim PPI biomarker that we will exploit to identify
all survival dependency classes in neuroblastoma. We will define the extent to which the biomarker remains a
stable intrinsic tumor feature that predicts selective vulnerability to Bcl2-family inhibitors. We also leverage
therapeutic MAPK inhibitors to antagonize Mcl1 dependency. Importantly, we seek to dev...

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 10119794
- **Project number:** 1R01CA248501-01A1
- **Recipient organization:** CHILDREN'S HOSP OF PHILADELPHIA
- **Principal Investigator:** MICHAEL D HOGARTY
- **Activity code:** R01 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** NIH
- **Fiscal year:** 2021
- **Award amount:** $423,029
- **Award type:** 1
- **Project period:** 2021-02-18 → 2026-01-31

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/10119794

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 10119794, Mechanistic biomarkers to enable Bcl2 inhibitor therapies for neuroblastoma (1R01CA248501-01A1). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-05-23 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/10119794. Licensed CC0.

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