| Literature DB >> 24500518 |
Abstract
Deregulated BCR-ABL oncogenic activity leads to transformation, oncogene addiction and drives disease progression in chronic myeloid leukemia (CML). Inhibition of BCR-ABL using Abl-specific kinase inhibitors (TKI) such as imatinib induces remarkable clinical responses. However, approximately only less than 15 % of all chronic-phase CML patients will remain relapse-free after discontinuation of imatinib in deep molecular remission. It is not well understood why persisting CML cells survive under TKI therapy without developing clonal evolution and frank TKI resistance. BCR-ABL expression level may be critically involved. Whereas higher BCR-ABL expression has been described as a pre-requisite for malignant CML stem cell transformation and CML progression to blast crisis, recent evidence suggests that during persistence TKI select for CML precursors with low BCR-ABL expression. Genetic, translational and clinical evidence is discussed to suggest that TKI-induced maintenance of low BCR-ABL signaling output may be potently tumor suppressive, because it abrogates oncogenic addiction.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24500518 PMCID: PMC3930845 DOI: 10.1007/s11899-013-0196-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Hematol Malig Rep ISSN: 1558-8211 Impact factor: 3.952
Fig. 1BCR-ABL levels govern engagement and evasion of tumor suppression in hematopoietic precursors, thereby controlling CML transformation. In normal hematopoietic stem cells, p53 negatively regulates self-renewal and p53 pathway activation is suppressed (left). During CML evolution, increasing BCR-ABL expression level must be tolerated (middle) by adjustment of pathways that suppress Arf-p53 activation (arm A), or by alternatively mutating the Arf-p53 checkpoint to resolve a pressure on this pathway (arm B). The consequence of both scenarios (arm A or B) would be tolerance of high-level BCR-ABL, which results in BCR-ABL overexpression induced transformation and CML progression
Fig. 2Suppression of high-level deregulated BCR-ABL-signaling intensity as a putative tumor suppressive mechanism of TKI. CML evolution is characterized by a continuous selection of high-level BCR-ABL-expressing clones, because high-level oncogene activity provides an increased aggressiveness and thus a growth advantage. BCR-ABL will engage intrinsic tumor suppressive pathways (such as Arf -p53) and cause a selective pressure against these pathways. Resolving this pressure by pathway mutagenesis will lead to CML progression. However, increasing BCR-ABL levels are also associated with strong BCR-ABL addiction and thus sensitivity to BCR-ABL kinase inhibitors such as imatinib. By depleting BCR-ABL-overexpressing clones and selecting for low-level BCR-ABL signaling output (indicated by decreasing red-staining intensity of nuclei), imatinib would counteract BCR-ABL addiction, and become tumor suppressive. It could be proposed that only TKI therapy-mediated suppression of BCR-ABL expression below a certain threshold (indicated as dotted line) may enable long-term persistence of residual CML clones