| Literature DB >> 16150941 |
Florian Heidel1, Fian K Solem, Frank Breitenbuecher, Daniel B Lipka, Stefan Kasper, M H Thiede, Christian Brandts, Hubert Serve, Johannes Roesel, Francis Giles, Eric Feldman, Gerhard Ehninger, Gary J Schiller, Stephen Nimer, Richard M Stone, Yanfeng Wang, Thomas Kindler, Pamela S Cohen, Christoph Huber, Thomas Fischer.
Abstract
Activating mutations in the FLT3 tyrosine kinase (TK) occur in approximately 35% of patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Therefore, targeting mutated FLT3 is an attractive therapeutic strategy, and early clinical trials testing FLT3 TK inhibitors (TKI) showed measurable clinical responses. Most of these responses were transient; however, in a subset of patients blast recurrence was preceded by an interval of prolonged remission. The etiology of clinical resistance to FLT3-TKI in AML is unclear but is of major significance for the development of future therapeutic strategies. We searched for mechanisms of resistance in 6 patients with AML who had relapses upon PKC412 treatment. In an index AML patient, an algorithm of analyses was applied using clinical material. In vivo and in vitro investigation of primary blasts at relapse revealed persistent TK phosphorylation of FLT3 despite sufficient PKC412 serum levels. Through additional molecular analyses, we identified a single amino acid substitution at position 676 (N676K) within the FLT3 kinase domain as the sole cause of resistance to PKC412 in this patient. Reconstitution experiments expressing the N676K mutant in 32D cells demonstrated that FLT3-ITD-N676K was sufficient to confer an intermediate level of resistance to PKC412 in vitro. These studies point out that a genetically complex malignancy such as AML may retain dependence on a single oncogenic signal.Entities:
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Year: 2005 PMID: 16150941 DOI: 10.1182/blood-2005-06-2469
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 22.113