| Literature DB >> 25006129 |
Zhuyan Guo1, Anlai Wang1, Weidong Zhang1, Mikhail Levit1, Qiang Gao1, Claude Barberis2, Michel Tabart3, Jingxin Zhang1, Dietmar Hoffmann1, Dmitri Wiederschain1, Jennifer Rocnik1, Fangxian Sun1, Josh Murtie1, Christoph Lengauer1, Stefan Gross1, Bailin Zhang1, Hong Cheng1, Vinod Patel2, Laurent Schio3, Francisco Adrian1, Marion Dorsch1, Carlos Garcia-Echeverria3, Shih-Min A Huang1.
Abstract
Postchemotherapy relapse presents a major unmet medical need in acute myeloid leukemia (AML), where treatment options are limited. CD25 is a leukemic stem cell marker and a conspicuous prognostic marker for overall/relapse-free survival in AML. Rare occurrence of genetic alterations among PIM family members imposes a substantial hurdle in formulating a compelling patient stratification strategy for the clinical development of selective PIM inhibitors in cancer. Here we show that CD25, a bona fide STAT5 regulated gene, is a mechanistically relevant predictive biomarker for sensitivity to PIM kinase inhibitors. Alone or in combination with tyrosine kinase inhibitors, PIM inhibitors can suppress STAT5 activation and significantly shorten the half-life of MYC to achieve substantial growth inhibition of high CD25-expressing AML cells. Our results highlight the importance of STAT5 and MYC in rendering cancer cells sensitive to PIM inhibitors. Because the presence of a CD25-positive subpopulation in leukemic blasts correlates with poor overall or relapse-free survival, our data suggest that a combination of PIM inhibitors with chemotherapy and tyrosine kinase inhibitors could improve long-term therapeutic outcomes in CD25-positive AML.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25006129 DOI: 10.1182/blood-2014-01-551234
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 22.113