Oncotarget

Blocking Protein Control Pathway Slows Rhabdomyosarcoma Growth in Mice

Aug 29, 2025
Researchers are making breakthroughs in fighting rhabdomyosarcoma, a common pediatric cancer, by targeting the protein quality control system in cancer cells. Disruption of this system slows tumor growth in mice, offering hope for improving treatments for high-risk cases that resist standard therapies. The study indicates that new strategies, like using the compound MAL3-101, could enhance outcomes for young patients facing aggressive cancers. This innovative approach could reshape how we understand and treat childhood cancer.
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INSIGHT

Proteostasis Disruption Slows Tumors

  • Disrupting the proteostasis network slows rhabdomyosarcoma tumor growth in preclinical models.
  • Targeting the cancer cell's protein quality control reveals a non‑cytotoxic vulnerability to exploit.
ADVICE

Screen For Drug‑Like Proteostasis Targets

  • Screen proteostasis components to find druggable targets that mimic MAL3‑101 effects in vivo.
  • Prioritize compounds that are more drug‑like than initial tool compounds for translational potential.
INSIGHT

p97 Is A Key Vulnerability

  • p97 (also called P97) is a central node that removes damaged or misfolded proteins and is targetable pharmacologically.
  • Inhibiting p97 with CB-5083 induced stress and tumor regression in cell lines and mouse xenografts.
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