scholarly journals Synergistic activity of combined inhibition of anti-apoptotic molecules in B-cell precursor ALL

Leukemia ◽  
2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Felix Seyfried ◽  
Felix Uli Stirnweiß ◽  
Alexandra Niedermayer ◽  
Stefanie Enzenmüller ◽  
Rebecca Louise Hörl ◽  
...  

AbstractTargeting BCL-2, a key regulator of survival in B-cell malignancies including precursor B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia, has become a promising treatment strategy. However, given the redundancy of anti-apoptotic BCL-2 family proteins (BCL-2, BCL-XL, MCL-1), single targeting may not be sufficient. When analyzing the effects of BH3-mimetics selectively targeting BCL-XL and MCL-1 alone or in combination with the BCL-2 inhibitor venetoclax, heterogeneous sensitivity to either of these inhibitors was found in ALL cell lines and in patient-derived xenografts. Interestingly, some venetoclax-resistant leukemias were sensitive to the MCL-1-selective antagonist S63845 and/or BCL-XL-selective A-1331852 suggesting functional mutual substitution. Consequently, co-inhibition of BCL-2 and MCL-1 or BCL-XL resulted in synergistic apoptosis induction. Functional analysis by BH3-profiling and analysis of protein complexes revealed that venetoclax-treated ALL cells are dependent on MCL-1 and BCL-XL, indicating that MCL-1 or BCL-XL provide an Achilles heel in BCL-2-inhibited cells. The effect of combining BCL-2 and MCL-1 inhibition by venetoclax and S63845 was evaluated in vivo and strongly enhanced anti-leukemia activity was found in a pre-clinical patient-derived xenograft model. Our study offers in-depth molecular analysis of mutual substitution of BCL-2 family proteins in acute lymphoblastic leukemia and provides targets for combination treatment in vivo and in ongoing clinical studies.

Blood ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 122 (21) ◽  
pp. 3734-3734
Author(s):  
Sinisa Dovat ◽  
Chunhua Song ◽  
Xiaokang Pan ◽  
Yali Ding ◽  
Chandrika S. Gowda ◽  
...  

Abstract IKZF1 (Ikaros) encodes a kruppel-like zinc finger protein that is essential for normal hematopoiesis and acts as a tumor suppressor in acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). The deletion and/or mutation of Ikaros is associated with the development of human T-cell and B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL) with poor outcome. In vivo, Ikaros binds DNA and regulates gene expression by chromatin remodeling. Since there is a paucity of known genes that are regulated by Ikaros, the molecular mechanisms through which Ikaros exerts its tumor suppressor function remain unknown. Here we describe studies that identify the targets and mechanisms of Ikaros-mediated epigenetic regulation in human B-ALL. We used chromatin immunoprecipitation coupled with next generation sequencing (ChIP-seq) to identify target genes that are bound by Ikaros in vivo in human B-ALL, and to define epigenetic patterns associated with Ikaros binding. ChIP-seq revealed a large set of Ikaros target genes that contain a characteristic Ikaros binding motif. The largest group of genes that are direct Ikaros targets included genes that are essential for cell cycle progression. These included CDC2, CDC7, CDK2 and CDK6 genes whose deregulation is associated with malignant transformation. The strong binding of ikaros to the promoters of cell cycle-promoting genes was confirmed by quantitative immunoprecipitation in primary leukemia cells. To establish whether Ikaros directly regulates transcription of the cell cycle-promoting genes, their expression was measured in B-ALL cells that were transduced with either a retroviral vector that contains Ikaros, or a control vector. Target gene expression was monitored by qRT-PCR. Ikaros strongly repressed transcription of the cell cycle-promoting genes, which resulted in cell cycle arrest. Global epigenetic profiling using ChIP-seq suggested that Ikaros represses cell cycle-promoting genes by inducing epigenetic changes that are consistent with repressive chromatin. High-resolution epigenetic profiling of the upstream regulatory elements of the cell cycle-promoting genes targeted by Ikaros showed that increased Ikaros expression results in the formation of heterochromatin, which is characterized by the presence of the H3K9me3 histone modification and associated transcriptional repression. Functional analysis revealed that phosphorylation of Ikaros by the oncogenic protein. Casein kinase II (CK2), impairs its function as a transcriptional repressor of the cell cycle-regulating genes. Inhibition of CK2 by specific inhibitors enhances Ikaros-mediated repression of the cell cycle-regulating genes resulting in cessation of cellular proliferation and cell cycle arrest in vitro and in vivo in a B-cell ALL preclinical model. This was associated with increased Ikaros binding and the formation of heterochromatin at upstream regulatory elements of the cell cycle-promoting genes. Our results provide evidence that Ikaros functions as a repressor of cell cycle-promoting genes in B-ALL by directly binding their promoters and inducing the formation of heterochromatin with characteristic H3K9me3 histone modifications Ikaros repressor function is negatively regulated by CK2 kinase in B-cell ALL. Inhibition of CK2 enhances Ikaros mediated-repression of cell cycle-promoting genes resulting in an anti-leukemia effect in a preclinical model of B-cell ALL. Presented data identified the mechanism of action of CK2 inhibitors and demonstrated their efficacy in B-cell ALL preclinical model. Results support the use of CK2 inhibitors in Phase I clinical trial. Supported by National Institutes of Health R01 HL095120 and a St. Baldrick’s Foundation Career Development Award (to S.D.). Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 112 (11) ◽  
pp. 3790-3790
Author(s):  
Abel Sanchez-Aguilera ◽  
Ami tava Sengupta ◽  
Joseph P Mastin ◽  
Kyung H Chang ◽  
David A Williams ◽  
...  

Abstract The fusion gene BCR-ABL, resulting from t(9;22) reciprocal chromosomal translocations, encodes a constitutively active tyrosine kinase. Two different isoforms of BCR-ABL, p190 and p210, are associated to two completely different diseases. In the tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) era, while p210-BCR-ABL-induced CML is highly responsive to TKI, p190-BCR-ABL still induces a poor prognosis B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL). The only difference between these two forms of BCR-ABL is the existence of a DH/Cdc24/PH domain in p210-BCR-ABL, which acts as a guanine nucleotide exchange factor (GEF) able to activate Rho GTPases. Rac is a subfamily of Rho GTPases with regulatory activity on hematopoietic stem cell and progenitor (HSC/P) functions. We have previously shown that Rac2 and further the combination of Rac1 and Rac2 mediate downstream signals in p210 BCR-ABL-induced myeloproliferation (Thomas EK, et al., Cancer Cell, 2007). Interestingly, despite the absence of a GEF domain in p190-BCR-ABL, Rac is activated, suggesting the activation of other GEF(s). Here we have analyzed whether Vav and Rac family members are involved in p190-BCR-ABL-induced B-ALL. We have used a combination of in vitro (Ba/F3 pro-B cells transduced with p190 or p210 BCR-ABL) and in vivo (murine transduction-transplantation model of p190 BCR-ABL-induced B-ALL) approaches. In Ba/F3 cells, both p190 BCR-ABL and p210 BCR-ABL activated Rac and the Rac effector p21 activated kinase (PAK), and their proliferation and survival appeared severely decreased in response to the Rac activation inhibitor NSC23766. Stat3, Stat5 and Jnk, but not ERK, p38 or NF-kB, were constitutively hyperactivated in p190 BCRABL-expressing Ba/F3 cells and primary murine B-ALL cells. Intracellular flow cytometry analysis demonstrated that Stat5 was specifically activated in the pro/pre-B leukemic cell population, compared to normal B cells. In the murine model of B-ALL, loss of Rac2, but not Rac3, prolonged survival and impaired leukemia development. Like in Ba/F3 cells, primary B-CFU and outgrowth in Witte-Whitlock assays of leukemic primary cells from mice was severely decreased by the addition of NSC23766 to the culture. Although Vav was activated by both p190- and p210-BCR-ABL, since NSC23766 does not block the activation by Vav1, we hypothesized that other GEFs were involved. Indeed, the loss of Vav1 or even combined loss of Vav1 and Vav2 did not impair BCR-ABL-mediated lymphoid leukemogenesis in vivo. Vav3, another member in the Vav family which uses a different mechanism of activation of Rac GTPases was a likely candidate. In fact, loss of Vav3 alone was able to significantly prolong the survival and attenuate development of p190 BCR-ABL-driven B-ALL. In conclusion, the results of this study indicate that Rac activation is necessary for the development of B-ALL induced by p190-BCR-ABL in vitro and in vivo, and validate a new signaling pathway as a therapeutic target for BCR-ABL-induced B-ALL.


2014 ◽  
Vol 5 (10) ◽  
pp. e1470-e1470 ◽  
Author(s):  
T Liu ◽  
R J Kishton ◽  
A N Macintyre ◽  
V A Gerriets ◽  
H Xiang ◽  
...  

Abstract The metabolic profiles of cancer cells have long been acknowledged to be altered and to provide new therapeutic opportunities. In particular, a wide range of both solid and liquid tumors use aerobic glycolysis to supply energy and support cell growth. This metabolic program leads to high rates of glucose consumption through glycolysis with secretion of lactate even in the presence of oxygen. Identifying the limiting events in aerobic glycolysis and the response of cancer cells to metabolic inhibition is now essential to exploit this potential metabolic dependency. Here, we examine the role of glucose uptake and the glucose transporter Glut1 in the metabolism and metabolic stress response of BCR-Abl+ B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia cells (B-ALL). B-ALL cells were highly glycolytic and primary human B-ALL samples were dependent on glycolysis. We show B-ALL cells express multiple glucose transporters and conditional genetic deletion of Glut1 led to a partial loss of glucose uptake. This reduced glucose transport capacity, however, was sufficient to metabolically reprogram B-ALL cells to decrease anabolic and increase catabolic flux. Cell proliferation decreased and a limited degree of apoptosis was also observed. Importantly, Glut1-deficient B-ALL cells failed to accumulate in vivo and leukemic progression was suppressed by Glut1 deletion. Similarly, pharmacologic inhibition of aerobic glycolysis with moderate doses of 2-deoxyglucose (2-DG) slowed B-ALL cell proliferation, but extensive apoptosis only occurred at high doses. Nevertheless, 2-DG induced the pro-apoptotic protein Bim and sensitized B-ALL cells to the tyrosine kinase inhibitor Dasatinib in vivo. Together, these data show that despite expression of multiple glucose transporters, B-ALL cells are reliant on Glut1 to maintain aerobic glycolysis and anabolic metabolism. Further, partial inhibition of glucose metabolism is sufficient to sensitize cancer cells to specifically targeted therapies, suggesting inhibition of aerobic glycolysis as a plausible adjuvant approach for B-ALL therapies.


HemaSphere ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 3 (S1) ◽  
pp. 32-33
Author(s):  
K. Fidyt ◽  
A. Pastorczak ◽  
A. Goral ◽  
A. Muchowicz ◽  
L. Komorowski ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 6 (44) ◽  
pp. eaba5536
Author(s):  
Chao Ma ◽  
Matthew T. Witkowski ◽  
Jacob Harris ◽  
Igor Dolgalev ◽  
Sheetal Sreeram ◽  
...  

B cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL) blasts hijack the bone marrow (BM) microenvironment to form chemoprotective leukemic BM “niches,” facilitating chemoresistance and, ultimately, disease relapse. However, the ability to dissect these evolving, heterogeneous interactions among distinct B-ALL subtypes and their varying BM niches is limited with current in vivo methods. Here, we demonstrated an in vitro organotypic “leukemia-on-a-chip” model to emulate the in vivo B-ALL BM pathology and comparatively studied the spatial and genetic heterogeneity of the BM niche in regulating B-ALL chemotherapy resistance. We revealed the heterogeneous chemoresistance mechanisms across various B-ALL cell lines and patient-derived samples. We showed that the leukemic perivascular, endosteal, and hematopoietic niche-derived factors maintain B-ALL survival and quiescence (e.g., CXCL12 cytokine signal, VCAM-1/OPN adhesive signals, and enhanced downstream leukemia-intrinsic NF-κB pathway). Furthermore, we demonstrated the preclinical use of our model to test niche-cotargeting regimens, which may translate to patient-specific therapy screening and response prediction.


2013 ◽  
Vol 37 (1) ◽  
pp. 83-88 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jason Kato ◽  
Noriko Satake ◽  
Robert T. O’Donnell ◽  
Mastewal Abuhay ◽  
Carly Lewis ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bianca J. Lee ◽  
Sharmila Mallya ◽  
Nuntana Dinglasan ◽  
Amos Fung ◽  
Tram Nguyen ◽  
...  

The mechanistic target of rapamycin (mTOR) is a kinase whose activity is elevated in hematological malignancies. mTOR-complex-1 (mTORC1) phosphorylates numerous substrates to promote cell proliferation and survival. Eukaryotic initiation factor 4E (eIF4E)-binding proteins (4E-BPs) are mTORC1 substrates with an integral role in oncogenic protein translation. Current pharmacological approaches to inhibit mTORC1 activity and 4E-BP phosphorylation have drawbacks. Recently we described a series of bi-steric compounds that are potent and selective inhibitors of mTORC1, inhibiting 4E-BP phosphorylation at lower concentrations than mTOR kinase inhibitors (TOR-KIs). Here we report the activity of the mTORC1-selective bi-steric inhibitor, RMC-4627, in BCR-ABL-driven models of B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL). RMC-4627 exhibited potent and selective inhibition of 4E-BP1 phosphorylation in B-ALL cell lines without inhibiting mTOR-complex-2 (mTORC2) activity. RMC-4627 suppressed cell cycle progression, reduced survival, and enhanced dasatinib cytotoxicity. Compared to a TOR-KI compound, RMC-4627 was more potent, and its effects on cell viability were sustained after washout in vitro. Notably, a once-weekly, well tolerated dose reduced leukemic burden in a B-ALL xenograft model and enhanced the activity of dasatinib. These preclinical studies suggest that intermittent dosing of a bi-steric mTORC1-selective inhibitor has therapeutic potential as a component of leukemia regimens, and further study is warranted.


Blood ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 132 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 1416-1416
Author(s):  
Felix Seyfried ◽  
Felix Stirnweiß ◽  
Stefan Köhrer ◽  
Klaus-Michael Debatin ◽  
Lüder Hinrich Meyer

Abstract Deregulated cell death and survival pathways contribute to leukemogenesis and treatment failure of B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (BCP-ALL) patients. The intrinsic apoptosis pathway is regulated at the mitochondrial level by different pro- and anti-apoptotic molecules. Members of the BCL-2 family are key regulators of mitochondrial apoptosis signaling. Pro-apoptotic BH3-only proteins like BIM and BID activate pro-death proteins such as BAX and BAK leading to cell death. Anti-apoptotic BCL-2 family members including BCL-2, BCL-XL and MCL-1 bind to and sequester pro-apoptotic molecules, prevent activation of pro-death proteins and counter-regulate apoptosis induction. Small molecule inhibitors have been developed that block binding to anti-apoptotic molecules like BCL-2, leading to release of pro-apoptotic proteins and cell death induction. In particular, the BCL-2-specific inhibitor venetoclax (VEN) has demonstrated substantial anti-cancer activity and became an approved drug for the treatment of CLL patients. Investigating different, individual BCP-ALL samples, we and others recently identified heterogeneous sensitivities for VEN, suggesting that BCP-ALL cells might also depend on other pro-survival BCL-2 family proteins including MCL-1, leading to VEN insensitivity and resistance. A novel BH3-mimetic, S63845, that selectively targets MCL-1 has been reported. Here, we assessed the activity of S63845 and addressed a potential synergism of simultaneous blockage of BCL-2 and MCL-1 by VEN and S63845 (S) in BCP-ALL. The activity of the MCL-1 inhibitor was analyzed in a panel of BCP-ALL cell lines (N=6) and a series of primary, patient-derived BCP-ALL primograft samples (N=27) determining half-maximal effective concentrations (EC50) upon exposure to increasing concentrations of S and analysis of cell death induction. We observed heterogeneous sensitivities to S with EC50 values ranging from 16 nM to almost 10 µM. Protein expression of MCL-1 and other BCL-2 family members BCL-2, BCL-XL and BCL-W was assessed by western blot analysis and quantified, however neither association of MCL-1 levels nor expression of the other regulators and S sensitivity was found in cell lines and primograft leukemias. Moreover, we also compared sensitivities for both inhibitors but found independent activities of S and VEN in individual ALL samples. Next, we addressed the role of MCL-1 for VEN sensitivity and generated two MCL-1 knock out BCP-ALL cell lines by CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing. In both lines, clearly increased VEN sensitivities were observed upon depletion of MCL-1, indicating that MCL-1 is contributing to activity of the BCL-2 inhibitor VEN. Based on these findings, we investigated the effects of pharmacological MCL-1 inhibition for VEN sensitivity and incubated all 6 cell lines with VEN and S at increasing concentrations and observed clear synergistic effects upon combined BCL-2 and MCL-1 inhibition indicated by combination indices (CI) below 0.1. Moreover, we investigated 7 primograft BCP-ALL samples and found that MCL-1 inhibition by S clearly synergized with VEN activity (CI < 0.3). To investigate the anti-leukemia activity of co-targeting BCL-2 and MCL-1 in vivo in a pre-clinical setting, a high-risk leukemia derived from an infant, MLL/ENL rearranged pro-B ALL case was transplanted onto NOD/SCID mice. Upon ALL manifestation (presence of >5% human blasts in blood), recipients were treated with either VEN, S, the combination of both, or vehicle for 10 days. After treatment, leukemia loads were analyzed showing significantly reduced loads in the co-treated group as compared to vehicle, VEN or S alone in spleen, bone marrow, and central nervous system (p-values < 0.05), indicating synergistic activity of co-inhibition of BCL-2 and MCL-1 in vivo. Taken together, our data show heterogeneous sensitivity of individual BCP-ALL samples to MCL-1 inhibition by S, which is not associated with MCL-1 protein expression levels or VEN sensitivity. Both, genetic depletion and inhibition of MCL-1 by S synergizes with VEN leading to increased anti-leukemia activity in vitro and ex vivo. Importantly, co-targeting BCL-2 and MCL-1 significantly reduced leukemia infiltration in spleen, BM and CNS in a pre-clinical model of high-risk BCP-ALL, warranting further evaluation and possible clinical application of targeting MCL-1 alone and in combination with BCL-2 inhibition. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


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