scholarly journals Aspartic Aminopeptidase Is a Novel Biomarker of Aggressive Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia

Cancers ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (7) ◽  
pp. 1876
Author(s):  
Pramath Kakodkar ◽  
Sanket More ◽  
Kinga András ◽  
Nikos Papakonstantinou ◽  
Sharon Kelly ◽  
...  

Treatment of chronic lymphocytic leukemia has advanced substantially as our understanding of the kinase signal transduction pathways driven by the B cell receptor (BcR) has developed. Particularly, understanding the role of Bruton tyrosine kinase and phosphatidyl inositol 3 kinase delta in driving prosurvival signal transduction in chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) cells and their targeting with pharmacological inhibitors (ibrutinib and idelalisib, respectively) has improved patient outcomes significantly. The kinase signaling pathway induced by the BcR is highly complex and has multiple interconnecting branches mediated by tyrosine and serine/threonine kinases activated downstream of the BcR. There is a high level of redundancy in the biological responses, with several BcR-signaling kinases driving nuclear factor kappa B activation or inducing antiapoptotic Bcl-2 genes. Accordingly, common gene targets of BcR-signaling kinases may serve as biomarkers indicating enhanced BCR-signaling and aggressive disease progression. This study used a gene expression correlation analysis of malignant B cell lines and primary CLL cells to identify genes whose expression correlated with BCR-signaling kinases overexpressed and/or overactivated in CLL, namely: AKT1, AKT2, BTK, MAPK1, MAPK3, PI3KCD and ZAP70. The analysis identified a 32-gene signature with a strong prognostic potential and DNPEP, the gene coding for aspartic aminopeptidase, as a predictor of aggressive CLL. DNPEP gene expression correlated with MAPK3, PI3KCD, and ZAP70 expression and, in the primary CLL test dataset, showed a strong prognostic potential. The inhibition of DNPEP with a pharmacological inhibitor enhanced the cytotoxic potential of idelalisib and ibrutinib, indicating a biological functionality of DNPEP in CLL. DNPEP, as an aminopeptidase, contributes to the maintenance of the free amino acid pool in CLL cells found to be an essential process for the survival of many cancer cell types, and thus, these results warrant further research into the exploitation of aminopeptidase inhibitors in the treatment of drug-resistant CLL.

Blood ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 136 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 9-9
Author(s):  
Shanye Yin ◽  
Gregory Lazarian ◽  
Elisa Ten Hacken ◽  
Tomasz Sewastianik ◽  
Satyen Gohil ◽  
...  

A hotspot mutation within the DNA-binding domain of IKZF3 (IKZF3-L162R) has been identified as a putative driver in chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL); however, its functional effects are unknown. We recently confirmed its role as a CLL driver in a B cell-restricted conditional knock-in model. IKZF3 mutation altered mature B cell development and signaling capacity, and induced CLL-like disease in elderly mice (~40% penetrance). Moreover, we found IKZF3-L162R acts as a gain-of-function mutation, altering DNA binding specificity and target selection of IKZF3, and resulting in overexpression of multiple B-cell receptor (BCR) genes. Consistent with the murine data, RNA-sequencing analysis showed that human CLL cells with mut-IKZF3 [n=4] have an enhanced signature of BCR-signaling gene expression compared to WT-IKZF3 [n=6, all IGHV unmutated] (p<0.001), and also exhibited general upregulation of key BCR-signaling regulators. These results confirm the role of IKZF3 as a master regulator of BCR-signaling gene expression, with the mutation contributing to overexpression of these genes. While mutation in IKZF3 has a clear functional impact on a cardinal CLL-associated pathway, such as BCR signaling, we note that this driver occurs only at low frequency in patients (~3%). Because somatic mutation represents but one mechanism by which a driver can alter a cellular pathway, we examined whether aberrant expression of IKZF3 could also yield differences in BCR-signaling gene expression. We have observed expression of the IKZF3 gene to be variably dysregulated amongst CLL patients through re-analysis of transcriptomic data from two independent cohorts of human CLL (DFCI, Landau et al., 2014; ICGC, Ferreira et al., 2014). We thus examined IKZF3 expression and BCR-signaling gene expression, or the 'BCR score' (calculated as the mean expression of 75 BCR signaling-associate genes) in those cohorts (DFCI cohort, n=107; ICGC cohort, n=274). Strikingly, CLL cells with higher IKZF3 expression (defined as greater than median expression) had higher BCR scores than those with lower IKZF3 expression (<median) (p=0.0015 and p<0.0001, respectively). These findings were consistent with the notion that IKZF3 may act as a broad regulator of BCR signaling genes, and that IKZF3 overexpression, like IKZF3 mutation, may provide fitness advantage. In support of this notion, our re-analysis of a gene expression dataset of 107 CLL samples (Herold Leukemia 2011) revealed that higher IKZF3 expression associated with poorer prognosis and worse overall survival (P=0.035). We previously reported that CLL cells with IKZF3 mutation appeared to increase in cancer cell fraction (CCF) with resistance to fludarabine-based chemotherapy (Landau Nature 2015). Instances of increase in mut-IKZF3 CCF upon treatment with the BCR-signaling inhibitor ibrutinib have been reported (Ahn ASH 2019). These studies together suggest an association of IKZF3 mutation with increased cellular survival following either chemotherapy or targeted treatment. To examine whether higher expression of IKZF3 was associated with altered sensitivity to ibrutinib, we performed scRNA-seq analysis (10x Genomics) of two previously treatment-naïve patients undergoing ibrutinib therapy (paired samples, baseline vs. Day 220). We analyzed an average of 11,080 cells per patient (2000 genes/cell). Of note, following ibrutinib treatment, remaining CLL cells expressed higher levels of IKZF3 transcript compared to pretreatment baseline (both p<0.0001), whereas no such change was observed in matched T cells (n ranging between 62 to 652 per experimental group, p>0.05), suggesting that cells with high expression of IKZF3 were selected by ibrutinib treatment. Moreover, we showed that ibrutinib treatment resulted in consistent upregulation of BCR-signaling genes (e.g., CD79B, LYN, GRB2, FOS, RAC1, PRKCB and NFKBIA) (n ranging between 362 to 1374 per experimental group, all p<0.0001), which were likewise activated by mutant IKZF3. Altogether, these data imply that IKZF3 mutation or overexpression may influence upregulation of BCR-signaling genes and enhance cellular fitness even during treatment with BCR-signaling inhibitors. We highlight our observation that IKZF3 mutation appears to be phenocopied by elevated IKZF3 expression, and suggest that alterations in mRNA or protein level that mimic genetic mutations could be widespread in human cancers. Disclosures Kipps: Pharmacyclics/ AbbVie, Breast Cancer Research Foundation, MD Anderson Cancer Center, Oncternal Therapeutics, Inc., Specialized Center of Research (SCOR) - The Leukemia and Lymphoma Society (LLS), California Institute for Regenerative Medicine (CIRM): Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees, Research Funding, Speakers Bureau; Celgene: Honoraria, Research Funding; Gilead: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees, Speakers Bureau; Genentech/Roche: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees, Speakers Bureau; VelosBio: Research Funding; Oncternal Therapeutics, Inc.: Other: Cirmtuzumab was developed by Thomas J. Kipps in the Thomas J. Kipps laboratory and licensed by the University of California to Oncternal Therapeutics, Inc., which provided stock options and research funding to the Thomas J. Kipps laboratory, Research Funding; Ascerta/AstraZeneca, Celgene, Genentech/F. Hoffmann-La Roche, Gilead, Janssen, Loxo Oncology, Octernal Therapeutics, Pharmacyclics/AbbVie, TG Therapeutics, VelosBio, and Verastem: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees. Wu:BionTech: Current equity holder in publicly-traded company; Pharmacyclics: Research Funding.


Blood ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 104 (11) ◽  
pp. 773-773
Author(s):  
Dirk Kienle ◽  
Alexander Kröber ◽  
Dirk Winkler ◽  
Daniel Mertens ◽  
Annett Habermann ◽  
...  

Abstract V3-21 gene usage defines a distinct genetic subgroup of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) characterized by a poor clinical outcome regardless of the VH mutation status. V3-21 cases exhibit a highly characteristic B-cell receptor (BCR) structure as demonstrated by homologous CDR3 sequences and a restricted use of VL genes implicating a common antigen involved in tumor pathogenesis of this specific CLL subgroup. To investigate the role of antigenic stimulation in the pathogenesis of V3-21 using CLL, we analyzed the quantitative expression of genes involved in BCR signaling (ZAP-70, SYK, BLNK, LYN, PI3K, PLCG2, FOS), B-cell activation (TRAF3, STAT6, NFKB), and cell cycle or apoptosis control (ATM, BCL-2, BAX, CDK4, CCND1, CCND2, CCND3, p27, E2F1, MYC) in V3-21 cases in comparison to VH mutated (VH MUT) and VH unmutated (VH UM) cases not using the V3-21 gene. To obtain native expression signatures we studied a non-CD19-purified (nPU) cohort (V3-21: 18 cases, equally divided into VH mutated and VH unmutated cases; VH MUT: 17; VH UM: 19) and, for verification, a CD19-purified (PU) cohort (V3-21: 10 cases, equally divided into VH mutated and unmutated; VH MUT: 12; VH UM: 16) to exclude a contamination of the results by non-tumor cells. All cases were analyzed by FISH for +3q, 6q-, +8q, 11q-, +12q, 13q-, 17p-, and t(11;14) to avoid major imbalances of genomic alterations between the subgroups under study. As expected, ZAP-70 expression was higher in VH UM as compared to VH MUT cases in the nPU (p=0.007) as well as the PU cohort (p=0.009). V3-21 cases showed a higher ZAP-70 expression as compared to VH MUT (nPU: p=0.033; PU: p=0.038). This applied also when restricting this comparison to V3-21 mutated cases (nPU: p=0.018). Median ZAP-70 expression in the PU cohort was 1.15 in VH MUT vs. 7.69 in VH UM cases, as compared to 7.05 in V3-21 cases (V3-21 mutated cases: 10.69; V3-21 unmutated: 6.7). Other genes differentially expressed between the V3-21 and VH MUT subgroups in nPU cases were PI3K (p=0.048), PLCG2 (p=0.007), CCND2 (p=0.003), p27 (p=0.003), BCL-2 (p=0.025), and ATM (p=0.006). In addition, a set of genes was detected with a differential expression between V3-21 and VH UM (nPU) including PLCG2 (p=0.014), NFKB (p=0.023), CCND2 (p=0.001), p27 (0.002), and BAX (p=0.028). Notably, except for ZAP-70, all of the differentially expressed genes showed a lower expression in V3-21 as compared to the other subgroups. When comparing the V3-21 mutated and V3-21 unmutated subgroups (nPU), there were no significant gene expression differences except for CDK4, which showed a lower expression in V3-21 unmutated cases. Therefore, cases with V3-21 usage appear to show a rather homogeneous gene expression pattern independently of the VH mutation status, which can be distinguished from VH MUT and VH UM cases not using V3-21. The expression differences observed suggest a role of differential BCR signaling in the pathogenesis of this distinct CLL subgroup. Deregulation of cell cycle, apoptosis, and candidate genes such as ATM indicate the involvement of additional pathways in the pathogenesis of CLL cases using V3-21.


Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 1187-1187
Author(s):  
Jan A. Burger ◽  
Myriam Krome ◽  
Andrea Bürkle ◽  
Tanja N. Hartmann

Abstract There is growing evidence that the microenvironment confers survival signals to Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia (CLL) B-cells that may result in disease progression and resistance to therapy. In the marrow or secondary lymphoid tissues, CLL cells are in close contact with non-tumoral accessory cells, such as mesenchymal stromal cells or nurselike cells. We previously characterized SDF-1 (CXCL12) as a central mediator for CLL cell migration and interaction with the protective microenvironment. Constitutive secretion of CXCL12 attracts CLL cells to stroma or NLC through its cognate receptor, CXCR4. These accessory cells protect CLL cells from spontaneous or drug-induced apoptosis, which is contact-dependent and partially mediated by CXCL12. B-cell receptor (BCR) signaling has been considered another important regulator of CLL cell survival. Typically, CLL cell that lack somatic mutations in the immunoglobulin (Ig) variable region (V) genes and display high levels of the tyrosine kinase ZAP-70 strongly responds to anti-IgM stimulation. Because both, CXCL12 stimulation and BCR signaling may represent important mechanism for maintenance of CLL cell within the microenvironment, we examined whether anti-IgM stimulation affects CXCL12 responses in correlation with the ZAP-70 status. BCR signaling was modulated either by crosslinking the BCR with IgM or by blocking the tyrosine kinase Syk. Effective BCR cross-linking with anti-IgM antibodies was demonstrated by phosphorylation of Syk and p44/42 MAP kinase. In ZAP-70 positive cells, BCR crosslinking resulted in a robust activation of Syk, p44/42 MAP kinases, and protein kinase B (Akt). ZAP-70 negative CLL cells displayed a weaker activation of p44/42 upon IgM crosslinking. Pretreatment of CLL cells with anti-IgM resulted in an enhanced calcium mobilization upon CXCL12 stimulation. This was not due to changes in surface expression of CXCR4. Accordingly, Syk inhibition by piceatannol resulted in a loss of calcium response upon CXCL12 stimulation. Furthermore, anti-IgM stimulation significantly increased CLL cell chemotaxis towards CXCL12 1.4 ± 1.2fold (n=9, p=0.027), and Syk inhibition by piceatannol decreased chemotaxis to 0.6 ± 0.2fold of controls (n=8). In these experiments, we could not detect differences between ZAP-70 positive or negative cells. However, there was a strong difference regarding the spontaneous, CXCL12-dependent migration of CLL cells beneath marrow stromal cells (pseudoemperipolesis). BCR crosslinking significantly increased pseudoemperipolesis of ZAP-70 expressing CLL cells 13.4 ± 21.0fold (n=7, p=0.043), whereas there was no significant increase in pseudoemperipolesis of ZAP-70 negative cells (1.4 ± 0.2fold increase, n=8). Syk inhibition by piceatannol significantly decreased the pseudoemperipolesis of ZAP-70 positive as well as ZAP-70 negative CLL cells to 0.4 ± 0.07 of controls (n=5, p=0.043). Interestingly, spontaneous migration of CLL cells beneath follicular dendritic cells (HK cells) was also significantly enhanced by anti-IgM stimulation, in particular in ZAP-70 positive cases. In summary, BCR signaling enhances calcium mobilization, CLL cell migration to CXCL12, and pseudoemperipolesis beneath marrow stroma or follicular dendritic cells. These data suggest that BCR stimulation co-operates with CXCL12 for localization and/or maintenance of CLL cells within distinct tissue microenvironments.


Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 178-178
Author(s):  
Stefania Gobessi ◽  
Aleksandar Petlickovski ◽  
Luca Laurenti ◽  
Dimitar G. Efremov

Abstract The protein tyrosine kinase ZAP-70 is expressed at high levels in leukemic B-cells from chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) patients with progressive disease and short survival. ZAP-70 is a key component of the proximal T-cell receptor signaling pathway and is highly homologous to Syk, an important B-cell receptor signaling (BCR) molecule. Recent studies indicate that ZAP-70 may participate in BCR signaling as well, but the mechanism of action is still not well understood. In T-cells, upon TCR stimulation ZAP-70 becomes phosphorylated on Tyr319 by the Src-like kinase Lck, which results in the release of the ZAP-70 kinase domain from an autoinhibited state to a fully active conformation. The Tyr319 site in ZAP-70 corresponds to the Tyr352 site in Syk, which is phosphorylated in B-cells following BCR stimulation. We therefore investigated the activation status of ZAP-70 and Syk in BCR stimulated CLL B-cells, using phosphorylation of Tyr319 and Tyr352 as markers of their activation. Analysis of 10 ZAP-70-positive CLL samples by immunoblotting with the phospho-ZAP70Tyr319/SykTyr352 antibody revealed that ZAP-70 is not phosphorylated at this site either before or after BCR stimulation, although in control experiments with Jurkat T-cells ZAP-70 became phosphorylated on Tyr319 upon TCR stimulation. Moreover, the Tyr352 site in Syk was phosphorylated following BCR stimulation in 6 of the 10 CLL B-cell samples. To further investigate the reasons for the unexpected lack of ZAP-70 activation in CLL B-cells, we produced stable transfectants of the BJAB lymphoma B-cell line that expressed ZAP-70 at levels similar to those found in CLL cases with progressive disease. In agreement with the CLL B-cell experiments, the Tyr319 site in ZAP-70 was not phosphorylated either before or after BCR stimulation. Since phosphorylation of Tyr319 is Lck-dependent in T-cells, and this kinase is expressed also in CLL B-cells, we ectopically expressed Lck in the ZAP-70-positive BJAB clones. Again, the Tyr319 site was not phosphorylated, indicating that ZAP-70 does not undergo activation of the kinase domain also in this cellular system. In contrast, BCR crosslinking in BJAB cells induced significant phosphorylation of Tyr352 in Syk, which was further enhanced in the clones that coexpressed ZAP-70. Furthermore, analysis of downstream signaling pathways following BCR stimulation showed stronger and prolonged activation of ERK and to a lesser extent Akt in the ZAP-70 positive clones, whereas no difference was observed in terms of activation of PLC-γ 2, JNK and degradation of the NF-kB inhibitor IkB. These data indicate that ZAP-70 does not undergo full activation in B-cells, but can still enhance activation of certain downstream BCR signaling pathways, possibly by affecting the activity of the related PTK Syk.


Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (22) ◽  
pp. 2343-2343
Author(s):  
Liguang Chen ◽  
Bing Cui ◽  
George Chen ◽  
Michelle Salcedo ◽  
Carlo M. Croce ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 2343 Poster Board II-320 B-cell receptor (BCR) signaling arguably plays an important role in the pathogenesis and/or progression of chronic lymphocytic leukemia. Ligation of the BCR by F(ab)2 anti-μ can induce phosphorylation of p72Syk, BLNK, phospholipase C-gamma (PLCγ) and other downstream adapter/signaling molecules, inducing intracellular calcium flux and cellular activation. Prior studies found that CLL cells that expressed unmutated Ig heavy-chain variable region genes (IGHV) and the zeta-associated protein of 70 kD (ZAP-70) generally experienced greater levels of activation following treatment with anti-μ than did CLL cells that lacked expression of ZAP-70. However, we found unusual cases that lacked expression of ZAP-70 that also responded vigorously to treatment with anti-μ, suggesting that other factors contribute to the noted differences in BCR-signaling. Analyses for expression of microRNAs by microarray revealed that CLL cells that used unmutated IGHV and that expressed ZAP-70 expressed higher levels of certain microRNAs than did cases that used mutated IGHV and that lacked expression of ZAP-70. One of such microRNA, miR-155, was found to target mRNA encoding SHIP-1, a phosphatase that plays a critical role in modulating the level of BCR signaling in normal B cells. Using quantitative assays for miR-155 we found high-level expression of this microRNA was associated with proficient BCR signaling in CLL. To examine whether miR-155 could modulate the levels of SHIP-1 and/or BCR signaling in CLL cells we transfected primary leukemia cells from each of multiple patients with control oligo-RNAs, miR-155, or a specific inhibitor of miR-155 (miR-155 inhibitor). Twenty-four hours later the cells were stimulated with anti-μ or control antibody and then examined 10 minutes later for expression of SHIP-1, induced calcium influx, or phosphorylation of kinases and adapter proteins that are involved in BCR signaling. CLL cells that had low expression levels of miR-155 and that were poorly responsive BCR had significantly higher levels of calcium influx and phosphorylated p72Syk, BLNK, and PLCγ in response to anti-μ following transfection with miR-155 than following mock transfection or transfection with control oligo-RNA. Conversely, CLL cells that had high expression levels of miR-155 and highly responsive BCR were made to have significantly higher amounts of SHIP-1 protein and to have significantly lower relative levels of phosphorylated protein and calcium influx in response to anti-μ following transfection with the miR-155 inhibitor than did mock transfected CLL cells. These results identify miR-155 as a factor that can modulate BCR signaling in CLL in part by regulating the relative expression level of SHIP-1. These results demonstrate that differential expression of microRNAs in CLL can influence physiologic features that potentially contribute to disease progression. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2020 ◽  
Vol 21 (6) ◽  
pp. 2206 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrea Härzschel ◽  
Antonella Zucchetto ◽  
Valter Gattei ◽  
Tanja Nicole Hartmann

Lineage commitment and differentiation of hematopoietic cells takes place in well-defined microenvironmental surroundings. Communication with other cell types is a vital prerequisite for the normal functions of the immune system, while disturbances in this communication support the development and progression of neoplastic disease. Integrins such as the integrin very late antigen-4 (VLA-4; CD49d/CD29) control the localization of healthy as well as malignant B cells within the tissue, and thus determine the patterns of organ infiltration. Malignant B cells retain some key characteristics of their normal counterparts, with B cell receptor (BCR) signaling and integrin-mediated adhesion being essential mediators of tumor cell homing, survival and proliferation. It is thus not surprising that targeting the BCR pathway using small molecule inhibitors has proved highly effective in the treatment of B cell malignancies. Attenuation of BCR-dependent lymphoma–microenvironment interactions was, in this regard, described as a main mechanism critically contributing to the efficacy of these agents. Here, we review the contribution of VLA-4 to normal B cell differentiation on the one hand, and to the pathophysiology of B cell malignancies on the other hand. We describe its impact as a prognostic marker, its interplay with BCR signaling and its predictive role for novel BCR-targeting therapies, in chronic lymphocytic leukemia and beyond.


Blood ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 108 (11) ◽  
pp. 2799-2799
Author(s):  
Liguang Chen ◽  
John Apgar ◽  
Li Tang ◽  
Thomas J. Kipps

Abstract CD79b is B-cell surface molecule that non-covalently associates with CD79a and surface immunoglobulin (sIg), which together serve as the B-cell receptor complex (BCR). Both CD79a and CD79b have cytosolic immunoreceptor tyrosine-based activation motifs (ITAMs) that can become phosphorylated following sIg ligation, thereby allowing for recruitment to the BCR complex of cytosolic kinases, such as p72Syk , which then can initiate downstream intracellular signaling events. Compared to normal B cells, chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) B cells typically expresses low levels of CD79b, which is speculated to contribute to the relatively poor capacity of CLL cells to initiate intracellular signaling following BCR ligation despite having apparently adequate levels of p72Syk. BCR signaling in CLL cells can be enhanced by expression of the zeta-associated protein of 70 kD (ZAP-70), a tyrosine kinase that initially was identified in T cells, where it plays a critical role in the phosphorylation of ITAMs of the accessory molecules of the T-cell receptor (TCR) complex for antigen following TCR ligation. We investigated for phosphorylation of CD79b following BCR ligation with F(ab)2 anti- μ antibody in CLL cell samples that did or did not express ZAP-70. All CLL cell samples expressed similar amounts of surface IgM and p72Syk, as assessed via flow cytometry and immunoblot analysis. Within 10 minutes after treatment with anti-μ the CLL cell samples that expressed ZAP-70 (n = 28) experienced a mean increase in phosphorylation of CD79b of 21.5% (± 14.0% S.D.), which was significantly greater than the 7.5% increase (± 7.9% S.D.) experienced by similarly treated CLL cell samples that did not express ZAP-70 (n = 19) (P< 0.01). Immune precipitation studies demonstrated association of CD79b with p72Syk in CLL B cells. CLL cell samples (n = 5) lacking expression of ZAP-70 were transfected with a control vector or an expression vector encoding ZAP-70, allowing us to examine the effect that engineered-expression of ZAP-70 has on CD79 phosphorylation following treatment with anti-μ. Anti-μ treatment induced significantly higher mean levels of CD79b phosphorylation in CLL samples made to express ZAP-70 (33% ± 16%) than in control mock-transfected CLL cells (4% ± 2%). This also was associated with enhanced anti-μ induced phosphorylation of p72Syk. We conclude that expression of ZAP-70 in CLL B cells enhances phosphorylation of the accessory molecules in the BCR complex following sIg ligation, potentially allowing for improved recruitment of cytosolic kinases and adapter proteins to these accessory molecules for enhanced BCR signaling.


Blood ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 112 (11) ◽  
pp. 5023-5023
Author(s):  
Y. Lynn Wang ◽  
Zibo Song ◽  
Pin Lu ◽  
John P. Leonard ◽  
Morton Coleman ◽  
...  

Abstract B cell receptor (BCR) signaling plays an essential role in the pathogenesis of chronic lymphocytic leukemia. In a subset of patients with a poor clinical outcome, BCR ligation leads to increased cell metabolism and cell survival (Cancer Research66, 7158–66, 2006). Based on these findings, we tested whether targeting BCR signaling with dasatinib, an inhibitor of Src kinase, would interfere with the signaling cascade and cause death of CLL B cells. CLL leukemic cells were isolated from 34 patients and were incubated with or without dasatinib at a low dose of 128 nM. Among 34 cases, viability of leukemic cells was reduced by 2% to 90%, with an average of ~50% reduction on day 4 of ex vivo culture. Further study showed that CLL B cells undergo death by apoptosis via the intrinsic pathway which involves the generation of reactive oxygen species. Analysis of the Src family kinases showed that phosphorylation of Src, Lyn and Hck was inhibited by dasatinib not only in those cases that responded to dasatinib with apoptosis, but also in those that did not respond well (&lt;20% apoptosis). Further analysis revealed that suppressed activity of two downstream molecules, Syk and PLC Statistical analysis showed a significant correlation between CLL dasatinib response and their IgVH mutation and ZAP70 status. Cases with worse prognoses by these criteria have a better response to the kinase inhibitor. Lastly, we have also found that ZAP70 positive cases showed a greater degree of PLC


Cancers ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (10) ◽  
pp. 1519 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kost ◽  
Saleh ◽  
Mejia ◽  
Mostafizar ◽  
Bouchard ◽  
...  

: The phosphatidyl-inositol 3 kinase (PI3K) δ inhibitor, idelalisib (IDE), is a potent inhibitor of the B-cell receptor pathway and a novel and highly effective agent for the treatment of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). We evaluated the activities of IDE in comparison to bendamusine (BEN), a commonly used alkylating agent, in primary CLL cells ex vivo. In contrast to BEN, IDE was cytotoxic to cells from extensively-treated patients, including those with a deletion (del)17p. Cross-resistance was not observed between BEN and IDE, confirming their different modes of cytotoxicity. Marked synergy was seen between BEN and IDE, even in cases that were resistant to BEN or IDE individually, and those with deletion (del) 17p. CD40L/interleukin 4 (IL4) co-treatment mimicking the CLL microenvironment increased resistance to IDE, but synergy was retained. PI3Kδ-deficient murine splenic B cells were more resistant to IDE and showed reduced synergy with BEN, thus confirming the importance of functional PI3Kδ protein. Although IDE was observed to induce γH2AX, IDE did not enhance activation of the DNA damage response nor DNA repair activity. Interestingly, IDE decreased global RNA synthesis and was antagonistic with 5,6-Dichlorobenzimidazole 1-b-D-ribofuranoside (DRB), an inhibitor of transcription. These findings add to the increasingly complex cellular effects of IDE, and B cell receptor (BCR) inhibitors in general, in CLL.


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