| Literature DB >> 24904821 |
Stephanie Shishido1, Halvard Bönig2, Yong-Mi Kim1.
Abstract
Chemotherapeutic drug resistance in acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is a significant problem, resulting in poor responsiveness to first-line treatment or relapse after transient remission. Classical anti-leukemic drugs are non-specific cell cycle poisons; some more modern drugs target oncogenic pathways in leukemia cells, although in ALL these do not play a very significant role. By contrast, the molecular interactions between microenvironment and leukemia cells are often neglected in the design of novel therapies against drug resistant leukemia. It was shown however, that chemotherapy resistance is promoted in part through cell-cell contact of leukemia cells with bone marrow (BM) stromal cells, also called cell adhesion-mediated drug resistance (CAM-DR). Incomplete response to chemotherapy results in persistence of resistant clones with or without detectable minimal residual disease (MRD). Approaches for how to address CAM-DR and MRD remain elusive. Specifically, studies using anti-functional antibodies and genetic models have identified integrin alpha4 as a critical molecule regulating BM homing and active retention of normal and leukemic cells. Pre-clinical evidence has been provided that interference with alpha4-mediated adhesion of ALL cells can sensitize them to chemotherapy and thus facilitate eradication of ALL cells in an MRD setting. To this end, Andreeff and colleagues recently provided evidence of stroma-induced and alpha4-mediated nuclear factor-κB signaling in leukemia cells, disruption of which depletes leukemia cells of strong survival signals. We here review the available evidence supporting the targeting of alpha4 as a novel strategy for treatment of drug resistant leukemia.Entities:
Keywords: CD49d; acute lymphoblastic leukemia; adhesion; drug resistance; integrin alpha4
Year: 2014 PMID: 24904821 PMCID: PMC4033044 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2014.00099
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1Activation of the integrin heterodimer induces a conformational change. The conformational states of the integrin heterodimer determine whether it functions for cellular adhesion or migration. The bent, inactive form of the integrin heterodimer prevents binding of ligands to the recognition region (left). Activation induced conformational change results in availability of the ligand binding region (right).
Figure 2Integrin intracellular signaling pathways regulated by ILK. A variety of biological processes are regulated by ILK, which is a central player in multiple signaling cascades crucial for tissue homeostasis. ILK activation results in downstream effects responsible for survival, invasion, and proliferation. AP-1, activator protein 1; casp, caspase; GSK β, glycogen synthase kinase-3β; MMP9, matrix metalloprotease 9; NF-κB, nuclear factor-κB; P, phosphate; PI3K, phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase; PIP3, PtdIns(3,4,5)P3. Solid black arrows indicate activation, dashed black arrows indicate downstream effects, and the red lines indicate inhibitory effects.
Figure 3Overview of integrin intracellular signaling cascades from both the alpha and beta subunits, leading to the activation of various cellular functions. Binding of an alpha/beta integrin to the extracellular matrix ligands leads to activation of FAK. Note that other signaling pathways are stimulated by integrin heterodimers, but are not included for clarity and conciseness. FAK: focal adhesion kinase; GRB2, growth-factor-receptor-bound-2; P, phosphate group; PAK, p21-activated kinase; PI3K, phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase; PIP3, PtdIns(3,4,5)P3; PKB, protein kinase B; SFKs, Src-family kinases; SOS, son-of-sevenless. Solid black arrows indicate activation, dashed black arrows indicate downstream effects, and the red lines indicate inhibitory effects.
Summary of integrin alpha4 targeting drugs.
| Drug | Target | Disease | Reference | Drug class | Mechanism/ligand |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Natalizumab | Alpha4beta1 and 7 | MS; leukemia | ( | Human monoclonal antibody | Non-competitive antagonism, VCAM |
| AJM300/HCA2969 | Alpha4beta1 and 7 | IBD, UC, Crohn’s | ( | Orally available small molecule | Selective antagonist, VCAM |
| SB683699/firategrast | Alpha4beta1 and 7 | IBD, MS, RA, asthma, Crohn’s | ( | Orally available small molecule | Selective antagonist, VCAM |
| R-411/valategrast | Alpha4beta1 and 7 | Asthma, arthritis | ( | Small molecule | Inhibit binding of alpha4 with receptors |
| IVL745 | Alpha4beta1 and 7 | Asthma | ( | Small molecule inhalant | LDV, VCAM, and fibronectin |
| CDP323 | Alpha4beta1 and 7 | MS | ( | Orally available small molecule | Antagonist |
| THI0019 | Alpha4beta1 and 7; alpha5beta1, alphaLbeta2 | N/A | ( | Small molecule | Agonist, binding at subunit interface |
| TBC3486 | Alpha4beta1 | N/A | ( | Urea-based small molecule | Ligand mimetic Selective antagonist, VCAM-1 |
| Bio-1211 | Alpha4beta1 and 7 | Asthma | ( | Urea-based small molecule | Selective inhibitor LDV, fibronectin |
| Bio5192 | Alpha4beta1 | EAE, HSC mobilization | ( | Urea-based small molecule | High-affinity due to slow dissociation rate LDV |
| LLP2A | Alpha4beta1 | Airway inflammation | ( | Peptidomimetic compound | Binds Trp188 and Gly190, close to binding sites for VCAM-1 and fibronectin |
| HMR-1031 | Alpha4beta1 | Asthma | ( | Small molecule inhalant | Selective antagonist VCAM-1 and fibronectin |
| Compound 7n | Alpha4 | Asthma | ( | Orally available small molecule | |
| MLN-02 | Alpha4beta7 | IBD | ( | Humanized antibody | Selective antagonist, fibronectin |
MS, multiple sclerosis; IBD, inflammatory bowel disease; UC, ulcerative colitis; RA, rheumatoid arthritis; EAE, experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis; LDV, leucine–aspartic acid–valine.