- Lucki, Natasha C;
- Villa, Genaro R;
- Vergani, Naja;
- Bollong, Michael J;
- Beyer, Brittney A;
- Lee, Jae Wook;
- Anglin, Justin L;
- Spangenberg, Stephan H;
- Chin, Emily N;
- Sharma, Amandeep;
- Johnson, Kevin;
- Sander, Philipp N;
- Gordon, Perry;
- Skirboll, Stephen L;
- Wurdak, Heiko;
- Schultz, Peter G;
- Mischel, Paul S;
- Lairson, Luke L
Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM; grade IV astrocytoma) is the most prevalent and aggressive form of primary brain cancer. A subpopulation of multipotent cells termed GBM cancer stem cells (CSCs) play a critical role in tumor initiation, tumor maintenance, metastasis, drug resistance, and recurrence following surgery. Here we report the identification of a small molecule, termed RIPGBM, from a cell-based chemical screen that selectively induces apoptosis in multiple primary patient-derived GBM CSC cultures. The cell type-dependent selectivity of this compound appears to arise at least in part from redox-dependent formation of a proapoptotic derivative, termed cRIPGBM, in GBM CSCs. cRIPGBM induces caspase 1-dependent apoptosis by binding to receptor-interacting protein kinase 2 (RIPK2) and acting as a molecular switch, which reduces the formation of a prosurvival RIPK2/TAK1 complex and increases the formation of a proapoptotic RIPK2/caspase 1 complex. In an orthotopic intracranial GBM CSC tumor xenograft mouse model, RIPGBM was found to significantly suppress tumor formation in vivo. Our chemical genetics-based approach has identified a drug candidate and a potential drug target that provide an approach to the development of treatments for this devastating disease.