CSIG-11. KINASE-DIRECTED INHIBITION OF PYRIMIDINE BIOSYNTHESIS IN PTEN-DEFICIENT GLIOBLASTOMA

2021 ◽  
Vol 23 (Supplement_6) ◽  
pp. vi35-vi35
Author(s):  
Pranjal Sarma ◽  
Kelli N Ennis ◽  
Catherine A Behrmann ◽  
Collin Wetzel ◽  
Biplab Dasgupta ◽  
...  

Abstract Targeting pyrimidine biosynthesis has been a mainstay of chemotherapy in oncology, including frontline treatment of pancreatic, breast, and colorectal carcinomas. In glioblastoma, the targeting pyrimidine biosynthesis is a promising emerging approach for counteracting the effects of PTEN-deficiency in glioblastoma. PTEN loss triggers the activation of mTORC1, which in turn phosphorylates and activates the ribosomal protein kinases S6K1 and S6K2. We have previously shown that combination treatment of inhibitors targeting S6K1 and the TYRO3-AXL-MERTK receptor tyrosine kinases (TAM-RTKs) triggers cytotoxic responses in PTEN-deficient glioblastoma cells. Here we show brain-penetrant inactivation of S6K1 and TAM-RTKs using the S6K1 inhibitor LY-2584702 and the TAM-RTK inhibitor BMS-777607, which reduced glioblastoma tumor growth. Pharmacogenetic analysis of signal transduction indicated a key role for S6K2 in sustaining survival signaling in PTEN-deficient glioblastoma cells. Steady-state metabolomics revealed that combined inactivation of S6K1 and TAM-RTKs resulted in decreased nucleotide biosynthesis, and flux analysis indicated reduced flux of glucose to pyrimidines. Altogether the results indicate a kinase-directed therapeutic strategy for targeting S6K1 and TAM-RTKs to reduce pyrimidine biosynthesis and glioblastoma tumor growth.

Author(s):  
Silvia A. Teixeira ◽  
Mariano S. Viapiano ◽  
Augusto F. Andrade ◽  
Mohan S. Nandhu ◽  
Julia A. Pezuk ◽  
...  

2011 ◽  
Vol 114 (3) ◽  
pp. 651-662 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hsin-I Ma ◽  
Shih-Hwa Chiou ◽  
Dueng-Yuan Hueng ◽  
Lung-Kuo Tai ◽  
Pin-I Huang ◽  
...  

Object Glioblastoma, the most common primary brain tumor, has a poor prognosis, even with aggressive resection and chemoradiotherapy. Recent studies indicate that CD133+ cells play a key role in radioresistance and recurrence of glioblastoma. Cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2), which converts arachidonic acid to prostaglandins, is over-expressed in a variety of tumors, including CD133+ glioblastomas. The COX-2–derived prostaglandins promote neovascularization during tumor development, and conventional radiotherapy increases the proportion of CD133+ cells rather than eradicating them. The aim of the present study was to investigate the role of celecoxib, a selective COX-2 inhibitor, in enhancing the therapeutic effects of radiation on CD133+ glioblastomas. Methods Cells positive for CD133 were isolated from glioblastoma specimens and characterized by flow cytometry, then treated with celecoxib and/or ionizing radiation (IR). Clonogenic assay, cell irradiation, cell cycle analysis, Western blot, and xenotransplantation were used to assess the effects of celecoxib alone, IR alone, and IR with celecoxib on CD133+ and CD133− glioblastoma cells. Three separate xenotransplantation experiments were carried out using 310 severe combined immunodeficient (SCID) mice: 1) an initial tumorigenicity evaluation in which 3 different quantities of untreated CD133– cells or untreated or pretreated CD133+ cells (5 treatment conditions) from 7 different tumors were injected into the striatum of 2 mice (210 mice total); 2) a tumor growth study (50 mice); and 3) a survival study (50 mice). For these last 2 studies the same 5 categories of cells were used as in the tumorigenicity (untreated CD133– cells, untreated or pretreated CD133+ cells, with pretreatment consisting of celecoxib alone, IR alone, or IR and celecoxib), but only 1 cell source (Case 2) and quantity (5 × 104 cells) were used. Results High levels of COX-2 protein were detected in the CD133+ but not the CD133− glioblastoma cells. The authors further demonstrated that 30 μM celecoxib was able to effectively enhance the IR effect in inhibiting colony formation and increasing IR-mediated apoptosis in celecoxib-treated CD133+ glioblastoma cells. Furthermore, reduction in radioresistance was correlated with the induction of G2/M arrest, which was partially mediated through the increase in the level of phosphorylated-cdc2. In vivo xenotransplant analysis further confirmed that CD133+-associated tumorigenicity was significantly suppressed by celecoxib treatment. Importantly, pretreatment of CD133+ glioblastoma cells with a combination of celecoxib and IR before injection into the striatum of SCID mice resulted in a statistically significant reduction in tumor growth and a statistically significant increase in the mean survival rate of the mice. Conclusions Celecoxib combined with radiation plays a critical role in the suppression of growth of CD133+ glioblastoma stemlike cells. Celecoxib is therefore a radiosensitizing drug for clinical application in glioblastoma.


2013 ◽  
Vol 289 (2) ◽  
pp. 600-616 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ronald C. Bruntz ◽  
Harry E. Taylor ◽  
Craig W. Lindsley ◽  
H. Alex Brown

2019 ◽  
Vol 21 (Supplement_6) ◽  
pp. vi40-vi41
Author(s):  
Maximilian Pruss ◽  
Annika Dwucet ◽  
Michal Hlavac ◽  
Richard Kast ◽  
Mike-Andrew Westhoff ◽  
...  

Abstract BACKGROUND Metabolic dysregulation is a common feature of cancers such as primary brain malignancies. In this work we examined whether a rewiring of the metabolome by a multi-targeting approach would induce enhanced anti-neoplastic activity in glioblastoma. METHODS Preclinical testing of a combined treatment with ONC201/TIC10 and 2-Deoxyglucose was performed in established and primary cultured glioblastoma cells. Extracellular flux analysis was used to determine real-time effects on OXPHOS (OCR) and glycolysis (ECAR). Expression of respiratory chain complexes was analysed by Western blotting. Biological effects on tumor formation were tested in patient-derived model systems on the chorion allantoic membrane (CAM). Protein array analyses were performed to determine effects on phospho protein kinase expression. RESULTS Treatment with ONC201/TIC10 leads to impaired mitochondrial respiration and a dose-dependent increase of glycolysis. ONC201/TIC10 combined with 2-Deoxyglucose, induces a state of energy deprivation characterized by a significant decrease in ATP levels. On the molecular level, pAMPK α1 was significantly up-regulated while a hypo-phosphorylation signature was noted including mTOR signaling, src family kinases and receptor tyrosine kinases such as EGFR and PDGFR-β. As a result, synergistic anti-proliferative and anti-migratory effects were observed among established and primary cultured glioblastoma cells. In addition, tumor formation on the CAM was significantly impaired following the combination treatment. CONCLUSIONS Simultaneous treatment with ONC201/TIC10 and 2-Deoxyglucose causes a reprogramming of the metabolic circuitry and results in a synergistic anti-glioblastoma activity. Since both agents were tested in clinical trials with good tolerability, and they both penetrate the blood-brain barrier, further clinical evaluation of this therapeutic strategy seems promising.


2017 ◽  
Vol 19 (suppl_6) ◽  
pp. vi252-vi252
Author(s):  
Mette Hartmark Nilsen ◽  
Lina Wik Leiss ◽  
Per Øyvind Enger

Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (22) ◽  
pp. 211-211
Author(s):  
Geqiang Li ◽  
Kristy L. Miskimen ◽  
Zhengqi Wang ◽  
Xiu Yan Xie ◽  
Jennifer Brenzovich ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 211 Phosphorylated signal transducer and activator of transcription 5 (STAT5) can inform diagnosis and clinical outcome in myeloid leukemia. STAT5 may be an important therapeutic target for hematologic disease characterized by constitutively active tyrosine kinases. The most direct evidence that STAT5 is crucial for oncogenic transformation has come from mouse models, which showed that STAT5-deficient hematopoietic cells are resistant to transformation by oncogenic tyrosine kinases, such as TEL-JAK2, TEL-PDGF, or BCR-ABL. The oncogenic role of STAT5 has been recognized and likely extends to other activated kinases such as JAK2, MPL, and FLT3. Although up-regulation of genes such as bcl-2, bcl-XL, mcl-1, D-type cyclins, and myc by activated oncogenic tyrosine kinases has been demonstrated, the specific mechanisms how STAT5 can critically control pre-leukemic expansion in the myeloid lineage have not been defined. We have shown previously that lethal myeloproliferative disease (MPD) in mice mediated by persistently activated STAT5 (STAT5aS711F) requires the N-domain but the mechanism was not defined. We now demonstrate by retrovirally complementing STAT5abnull/null primary mast cells that STAT5a lacking the N-domain (STAT5aΔN) ineffectively protected against cytokine withdrawal-induced cell death relative to wild-type STAT5a. To study the mechanisms for this survival defect, bcl-2 and bcl-XL protein levels were analyzed by Western blot and shown to be greatly reduced. Whether bcl-2 is a direct target gene of STAT5 in native chromatin as validated by chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) has not been previously shown. We identified 7 conserved STAT5 binding sites in the bcl-2 gene and tested these by ChIP. Only one site located within intron 2 was bound by STAT5a and STAT5aΔN in mast cells cultured in IL-3 alone, where bcl-2 mRNA levels were low. STAT5a add-back induced bcl-2 mRNA (10-fold) compared with STAT5aΔN (2- to 3-fold). Interestingly, when STAT5 was absent the mRNA levels of bcl-2 were not reduced when mast cells were grown in the presence of both IL-3 and SCF, despite the virtual absence of bcl-2 protein. MicroRNAs (miRs) are small, noncoding, single-stranded RNAs of ∼22 nucleotides that negatively regulate gene expression at the post-transcriptional level primarily through targeting the 3'-UTR of target mRNAs. There are no current reports of STAT5 mediated miR expression. We found that wild-type STAT5a and STAT5aS711F suppressed accumulation of miR15b/16 in primary mast cells and transduced BaF3 cells. Importantly, we show binding of STAT5 to a conserved STAT5 binding site in the promoter of miR15b/16 by ChIP. We propose that reciprocal induction of bcl-2 mRNA and suppression of miR15b/16 maintained bcl-2 protein levels. We also observed binding of STAT5aΔNS711F at both sites by ChIP, indicating that co-activator and co-repressor interactions with the N-domain determine regulation of bcl-2. To test whether these observations of bcl-2 regulation were physiologically relevant in the setting of activated STAT5 in myeloproliferative disease, retroviral complementation of STAT5abnull/null fetal liver cells was performed and followed by transplantation into lethally-irradiated recipients. Persistently active STAT5aS711F lacking the N-domain (STAT5aΔNS711F) was insufficient to protect c-Kit+Lin−Sca-1+ (KLS) cells from apoptosis as determined by Annexin V/DAPI staining. These cells were unable to induce bcl-2 expression determined by intracellular flow cytometry 15 days following injection of donor cells. In contrast, STAT5aS711F caused robust KLS cell expansion, induction of bcl-2, and 47-fold expansion of peripheral Gr-1+Mac-1+ cells. In the absence of the STAT5 N-domain a mild splenomegaly was observed with 50% of mice surviving greater than 90 days, instead of a rapidly lethal monocytic disease observed when full-length STAT5aS711F was present, with death of all mice by 35 days. Importantly, the modest 6-fold increase in peripheral Gr-1+Mac-1+ counts and better survival conferred by STAT5aΔNS711F could be reversed to 41-fold above control levels by adding back only bcl-2 through H2k/bcl-2 transgenic expression. Overall, these studies define N-domain dependent survival signaling as an Achilles' heel of persistent STAT5 activation and highlight the potential therapeutic importance of targeting STAT5 N-domain mediated regulation of bcl-2 family members. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 2415-2415
Author(s):  
Adrian Schwarzer ◽  
Helmut Holtmann ◽  
Martijn Brugman ◽  
Johann Meyer ◽  
Doris Steinemann ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 2415 Introduction. High activation of the PI3K-AKT-mTOR pathway is characteristic for T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) and has been linked to c-myc independence, as well as resistance of T-ALL to Glucocorticoids and Notch inhibition. The master regulator of PI3K-AKT signaling is the lipid phosphatase PTEN. Despite impaired or lost PTEN activity in T-ALL experimental evidence suggests that input from receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs) is needed to sustain high mTOR activation. Here we investigated how RTK signaling contributes to the pathogenesis of T-ALL. To mimic RTK signaling we expressed ΔTrkA, a constitutively active nerve growth factor RTK in primary murine hematopoietic cells. Injection of ΔTrkA-transduced cells into C57BL6 mice induced transplantable T-ALL with a latency of 120 days. Results. Signaling studies showed that ΔTRKA activates mTORC1 over the MAPK pathway, but not mTORC2. In contrast, ΔTRKA+ T-ALL showed a profound shift in the use of downstream signaling cascades, displaying a very high activation of mTORC1 and mTORC2 and absent MAPK signaling. To understand the rewired signaling network we first ruled out contribution of insertional mutagenesis by sequencing vector integration sites. Array-CGH revealed hetero- or homozygous loss of PTEN in 4 of 6 T-ALL lines. In the remaining 2 T-ALL lines, which showed normal PTEN protein levels, we detected two PTEN mutations in the phosphatase domain, D92G and G165E, the latter of which has not been described before. Re-expression of the mutants in PTEN−/− cells revealed complete loss of function for D92G and a partial loss for the G165E mutant. Restoration of wt PTEN expression in the T-ALLs resulted in reversion of the signaling pattern. Sequencing of Notch1 revealed both, PEST domain mutations and 5'-deletions in cis, in all but one investigated T-ALL. Northern and Western Blots confirmed the expression of truncated Notch1 transcripts and protein. Notch inhibition in PTEN−/− cell lines resulted in robust inhibition of mTORC2, showing that Notch contributes to mTORC2 activation independently of the Hes1-PTEN axis. Despite the loss of PTEN most T-ALLs remained addicted to the input of the leukemia initiating RTK, ΔTRKA. Importantly, the cooperation of three oncogenic pathways converging on mTOR culminated in an oncogenic addiction to mTOR. We screened several inhibitors of the mTOR pathway and found that ΔTRKA+ PTEN− Notch+ T-ALL are highly susceptible to an inhibition of cap dependent translation by 4EGI-1, whereas primary hematopoietic cells and freshly isolated thymocytes were far less susceptible. Polysome profiling indicated a profound decrease in ribosome occupancy upon treatment with 4EGI-1. Microarray analysis of polysome fractions revealed that mRNAs belonging to genes that were strongly upregulated between T-ALL and normal thymocytes were specifically shifted out of the actively translated transcriptome by 4EGI-1. These genes included members of the translational apparatus itself, mitochondrial matrix proteins, cell cycle regulators such as CyclinD1 and c-myc as well as Bcl-2. Western blots confirmed early loss of these proteins after cessation of cap dependent translation. Conclusions. Biochemical and genetic dissection of T-ALLs induced by constitutive RTK signaling uncovered activating Notch mutations and PTEN loss as cooperating events and revealed a strong, druggable addiction to cap-dependent translation downstream of oncogenic mTOR. The striking overlap of genes defining the molecular difference between T-ALL blasts and normal thymocytes and genes that preferentially lost ribosomal occupancy upon 4EGI-1 treatment suggests that this drug targets oncogenic core pathways in T-ALL and deserves further investigation. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


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