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Supplementary Tables S1-S6 from Repurposing NAMPT Inhibitors for Germinal Center B Cell–Like Diffuse Large B-Cell Lymphoma

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posted on 2024-11-01, 07:20 authored by Claudio Scuoppo, Bowen Cai, Kenneth Ofori, Hanna Scholze, Rahul Kumar, Angelo D’Alessandro, Katia Basso, Laura Pasqualucci, Riccardo Dalla-Favera

Raw data related to 1) Drug Sensitivity Screening; 2) Metabolic Profiling; 3) Transcript levels of NAD; 4) DepMap Depletion Score for NAD; 5) NP ratio in mutated vs WT GCB-DLBCL samples; 6) NP mRNA ratio in DLBCL primary cases

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National Cancer Institute (NCI)

United States Department of Health and Human Services

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Leukemia and Lymphoma Society (LLS)

National Institutes of Health (NIH)

American Society of Hematology (ASH)

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ARTICLE ABSTRACT

Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) includes the activated B cell–like (ABC) and germinal center B cell–like (GCB) subtypes, which differ in cell of origin, genetics, and clinical response. By screening the subtype-specific activity of 211 drugs approved or in active clinical development for other diseases, we identified inhibitors of nicotinamide phosphoribosyl transferase (NAMPTi) as active in a subset of GCB-DLBCL in vitro and in vivo. We validated three chemically distinct NAMPTis for their on-target activity based on biochemical and genetic rescue approaches and found the ratio between NAMPT and PARP1 RNA levels was predictive of NAMPTi sensitivity across DLBCL subtypes. Notably, the NAMPT:PARP1 transcript ratio predicts higher antitumor activity in BCL2-translocated GCB-DLBCL. Accordingly, pharmacologic and genetic inhibition of BCL2 was potently synergistic with NAMPT blockade. These data support the inhibition of NAMPT as a therapeutically relevant strategy for BCL2-translocated DLBCLs.Significance: Targeted therapies have emerged for the ABC subtype of DLBCL, but not for the GCB subtype, despite the evidence of a significant subset of high-risk cases. We identify a drug that specifically targets a subset of GCB-DLBCL and provide preclinical evidence for BCL2 translocations as biomarkers for their identification.

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