Wistar-Penn Collaboration Identifies HSP70 as Promising New Target for Melanoma Therapy
Source: OncLive, March 2015
In the laboratory of Maureen Murphy, PhD, we began our collaboration with the lab of Donna L. George, PhD, at the University of Pennsylvania to determine the role of HSP70. As one can imagine, tumor cells routinely find themselves exposed to enormous levels of stress. When we compared melanoma tumor cells with those of normal skin cells, we found that the melanoma cells expressed markedly higher levels of HSP70 (Figure).
This is particularly exciting for us because this is the very definition of targeted therapy. Normal cells do not require HSP70 to survive, and the HSP70 that is found at low levels in normal cells is different from the HSP70 in cancerous cells, making it an ideal therapeutic target.
Commercial Development Advances
We also recently received a 2014 Discovery Fast Track Challenge award from GlaxoSmithKline (GSK), one of only 15 projects selected worldwide for the program. Through the program, GSK partners with academic institutions in order to facilitate the tran- sition of promising lead compounds from preclinical studies toward clinical trials in human patients.
This partnership between academia and a pharma- ceutical company like GSK is very helpful because we believe we have a very promising target not just for melanoma but also for a number of other types of cancer. Since GSK has a plethora of exploratory compounds, the collaboration exponentially increases our chances of finding a viable drug candidate for our target and of doing so much more quickly.