The research team also tested the compound in healthy mice and observed no adverse effects.

“It took us several years to chase down exactly which protein was being affected by ERX-41.” Ahn said. “That was the hard part. We chased many dead ends, but we did not give up.

“Triple-negative breast cancer is particularly insidious — it targets women at younger ages; it’s aggressive; and it’s treatment resistant. I’m really glad we’ve discovered something that has the potential to make a significant difference for these patients.”

The researchers fed the compound to mice with human forms of cancerous tumors, and the tumors got smaller. The molecule also proved effective at killing cancer cells in human tissue gathered from patients who had their tumors removed.

They also found that ERX-41 is effective against other cancer types with elevated endoplasmic reticulum stress, including hard-to-treat pancreatic and ovarian cancers and glioblastoma, the most aggressive and lethal primary brain cancer.

“As a chemist, I am somewhat isolated from patients, so this success is an opportunity for me to feel like what I do can be useful to society,” Ahn said.

Ahn is a joint holder of patents issued and pending on ERX-41 and related compounds, which have been licensed to the Dallas-based startup EtiraRX, a company co-founded in 2018 by Ahn, Raj and Vadlamudi. The company recently announced that it plans to begin clinical trials of ERX-41 as early as the first quarter of 2023.

Ahn’s research on this project is supported by the National Cancer Institute, part of the National Institutes of Health (1R01CA223828); the Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas; and The Welch Foundation.

In addition to researchers from UT Southwestern and UT Health San Antonio, other study authors from Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Janelia Research Campus, Northwest A&F University in China and the Medical College of Xiamen University in China contributed.