A high-throughput zebrafish screen identifies novel candidate treatments for Kaposiform Lymphangiomatosis (KLA)

Ivan Bassi, Amani Jabali, Naama Farag, Shany Egozi, Noga Moshe, Gil S. Leichner, Polina Geva, Lotan Levin, Aviv Barzilai, Camila Avivi, Jonathan Long, Jason J. Otterstrom, Yael Paran, Haim Barr, Karina Yaniv, Shoshana Greenberger*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticle

Abstract

Kaposiform Lymphangiomatosis (KLA) is a rare, aggressive, and incurable disease caused by a somatic activating NRAS mutation (p.Q61R) in lymphatic endothelial cells (LECs). The development of new therapeutic avenues is hampered by the lack of animal models faithfully replicating the clinical manifestations of KLA. Here, we established a novel zebrafish model of KLA by driving conditional expression of the human NRAS mutation in venous and lymphatic ECs. We find that mutant embryos recapitulated clinical features of KLA, including pericardial edema and a dilated thoracic duct, and that the phenotypes were reverted by Trametinib, a MEK inhibitor used for KLA treatment. We further leverage this model in combination with an AI-based high-throughput drug screening platform to search for small compounds selectively reverting the mutant phenotypes and identify Cabozantinib, an FDA-approved tyrosine kinase inhibitor, and GSK690693, a competitive pan-Akt kinase inhibitor, as leading hits. Finally, we test these drugs in cultured cells derived from KLA patient and demonstrate their ability to normalize LEC sprouting and block NRAS downstream pathways, underscoring the potential of GSK690693 and Cabozantinib as potential KLA treatments. Overall, our novel zebrafish model provides a valuable tool for research into the etiology of KLA and for identifying new therapeutic avenues.Competing Interest StatementThe authors have declared no competing interest.
Original languageEnglish
JournalBioRxiv
DOIs
Publication statusIn preparation - 5 Mar 2024

Bibliographical note

The authors thank H. Hasid and Y. Yogev (Weizmann Institute, Israel) for technical assistance; G. Almog, R. Hofi, A. Glozman, and R. Brihon (Weizmann Institute, Israel) for superb fish care. A. Pavlovsky (Inst. of Pathology, Sheba Medical Center) for assistance with immunostaining. G. Cohen (Wohl Institute for Drug Discovery) for compound plate preparation; E. Ben Zeev (Medicinal Chemistry, G-INCPM) for chemical database searches. This work was supported in part by ERC CoG (LymphMap 818858) to KY, Million Dollar Bike Ride Grant (MDBR-23-021-CLA) from the Orphan Disease Center, University of Pennsylvania to KY, the Weizmann SABRA – Yeda-Sela – WRC Program to KY, the Estate of Emile Mimran, and The Maurice and Vivienne Wohl Biology Endowment and the Brenden-Mann Women’s Innovation Impact Fund to KY, Lymphatic Malformation Institute grant to SG, Orphan Disease Center 2018 Million Dollar Bike Ride to SG and Talpiot Medical Leadership grant, Sheba Medical Center, to SG. K.Y. is the incumbent of the Enid Barden and Aaron J. Jade Professorial Chair in Memory of Cantor John Y. Jade. I.B. was supported by a postdoctoral fellowship by the Sergio Lombroso Program and a Senior Postdoc Fellowship by the Weizmann Institute. N.M. is supported by research grants from the Estate of Olga Klein Astrachan and the Estate of Mady Dukler.

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