| Literature DB >> 27443263 |
M N Cruickshank1, J Ford1, L C Cheung1, J Heng1, S Singh1, J Wells1, T W Failes2, G M Arndt2, N Smithers3, R K Prinjha3, D Anderson4, K W Carter5, A M Gout5, T Lassmann5, J O'Reilly6,7, C H Cole1,8,9, R S Kotecha1,8,9, U R Kees1.
Abstract
To address the poor prognosis of mixed lineage leukemia (MLL)-rearranged infant acute lymphoblastic leukemia (iALL), we generated a panel of cell lines from primary patient samples and investigated cytotoxic responses to contemporary and novel Food and Drug Administration-approved chemotherapeutics. To characterize representation of primary disease within cell lines, molecular features were compared using RNA-sequencing and cytogenetics. High-throughput screening revealed variable efficacy of currently used drugs, however identified consistent efficacy of three novel drug classes: proteasome inhibitors, histone deacetylase inhibitors and cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors. Gene expression of drug targets was highly reproducible comparing iALL cell lines to matched primary specimens. Histone deacetylase inhibitors, including romidepsin (ROM), enhanced the activity of a key component of iALL therapy, cytarabine (ARAC) in vitro and combined administration of ROM and ARAC to xenografted mice further reduced leukemia burden. Molecular studies showed that ROM reduces expression of cytidine deaminase, an enzyme involved in ARAC deactivation, and enhances the DNA damage-response to ARAC. In conclusion, we present a valuable resource for drug discovery, including the first systematic analysis of transcriptome reproducibility in vitro, and have identified ROM as a promising therapeutic for MLL-rearranged iALL.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27443263 PMCID: PMC5220136 DOI: 10.1038/leu.2016.165
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Leukemia ISSN: 0887-6924 Impact factor: 11.528
Clinical characteristics of five infants with MLL-rearranged acute lymphoblastic leukemia and characterization of nine patient-derived cell lines
| P272 | Female | 339 | 317 | CNS 1 | CCG 1883 | Bone marrow | 3 | CCG 1008 | Died of disease; overall survival 5 months | PER-485A | 48 | 47, XX,der(4)t(4;11)(q21;q23), add(4)(p16),+6, del(7)(p14),add(8)(q24.3),der(9)inv(9)(p11q12) del(9)(p24), der(11)t(4;11)(q21;q23) |
| P287 | Female | 9 | 4.2 | Unknown | CCG 1883 | Bone marrow | 3 | CCG 0922 | Died of disease; overall survival 4 months | PER-490A | 72 | 46, XX,t(4;11)(q21;q23)/46,XX,t(4;11),dup(1) (q12q44)/46,XX,t(4;11),der(2)t(1;2)(q12;q37); mosaic karyotype. |
| P337 | Female | 82 | 564 | CNS 2 | CCG 1901-HSCT | Bone marrow | 16 | CCG 1882-2nd HSCT | Alive without disease; 21 years of age at last follow up | PER-784A | ND | 46,XX,t(2;11)(q37;q23)[15].ish t(2;11)(3̀MLL+5̀MLL+)[10].nuc ish(MLLx2) (5̀MLLsep3̀MLLx1)[198/200] der(11), der(2) and der(13) in complex rearrangement (FISH). |
| PER-826A | 192 | Nuc ish(MLLx2)(5̀MLLsep3̀MLLx1)[100] der(11), der(2) and der(13) in complex rearrangement (FISH). | ||||||||||
| P399 | Female | 66 | 670 | Unknown | CCG 1953 | No | _ | _ | Alive without disease; 19 years of age at last follow up | PER-785A | 60 | 46,XX,t(4;11)(q21;q23),der(19)t(1;19)(q12;p13.3) [16]/46,idem,der(16)t(1;16)(q21;q12.1)[4].ish t(4;11)(3̀MLL+5̀MLL+)[5] mosaic karyotype. |
| PER-785S | ND | 46,XX,t(4;11)(q21;q23),der(19)t(1;19)(q12;p13.3) [16]/46,idem,der(16)t(1;16)(q21;q12.1)[2].ish t(4;11)(3̀MLL+5̀MLL+)[5] mosaic karyotype. | ||||||||||
| P810 | Female | 52 | 102 | CNS 2 | COG P9407-HSCT | No | _ | _ | Died from hepatic sinusoidal obstruction syndrome post HSCT; overall survival 4 months | PER-703A | 60 | 46~49,XX,+der(1)t(1;11)(p32;q23), t(1;11)(p32;q23),+3,+7,+8,-11[cp6] |
| PER-703S | ND | 48~51,XX,+der(1)t(1;11)(p32;q23),t(1;11) (p32;q23),+3,+7, +8[cp6] | ||||||||||
| PER-733S | ND | 47,XX,+der(1)t(1;11)(p32;q23),t(1;11)(p32;q23), add(22)(q13)[7] |
Abbreviations: CCG, Children's Cancer Group; CNS, central nervous system; COG, Children's Oncology Group; FISH, fluorescence in situ hybridization; HSCT, hematopoietic stem cell transplantation; MLL, mixed lineage leukemia; ND, not determined.
Immunophenotypes of infant acute lymphoblastic leukemia cell lines
| PER-485A | −ve | −ve | 17% | 99% | −ve | 24% | −ve | 98% |
| PER-490A | −ve | 98% | −ve | 52% | −ve | 100% | 94% | 66% |
| PER-784A | 90% | 95% | 97% | 65% | −ve | 95% | 85% | 99% |
| PER-826A | 68% | 97% | 98% | 80% | −ve | 99% | 94% | 99% |
| PER-785A | −ve | 99% | 99% | 30% | 80% | 98% | 91% | 99% |
| PER-785S | −ve | 96% | 95% | 49% | 75% | 99% | ND | 99% |
| PER-703A | −ve | −ve | 98% | 99% | −ve | 90% | −ve | 98% |
| PER-703S | −ve | −ve | 99% | 99% | −ve | 95% | −ve | 97% |
| PER-733S | −ve | −ve | 70% | 94% | −ve | 30% | 70% | 92% |
Figure 1Comparative analysis of iALL patient and matched cell line transcriptomes. (a) Scatterplots of normalized RNA-seq count data (log2 counts per million) displaying correspondence between patient sample (x axes) and a representative matched cell line (y axes) defined using the IDR algorithm. Data points are coloured according to IDR value. The number of genes showing corresponding expression (below a cutoff IDR<0.05) for paired samples are shown within each plot. (b) Violinplots displaying RNA-seq count data from patient and matched cell lines partitioned by gene categories defined using Ensembl annotations, including protein-coding genes (n=12130), non-coding RNAs (n=1855) and pseudogenes (n=1261).
Figure 2Characterization of drug–responses of iALL cell lines. Response of iALL cell lines to 12 currently used drugs, novel FDA-approved drugs and rationally chosen targeted drugs. Cell viability following 72-h drug exposure was measured by alamarBlue assay. Dose resulting in 50% cell death (IC50) was determined by testing eight drug concentrations (from 3 nM up to 10 μM doses in threefold dilutions). The heatmap shows IC50 values (log10-scale) according to the colour key; cell lines (columns) are ordered by unsupervised clustering. Drugs are ordered according to mechanism of cytotoxicity or chemical structure, with conventional clinical iALL drugs displayed in the top section.
Figure 3ROM synergizes with ARAC in vitro. Cell lines (PER-485A, PER-490A, PER-703A, PER-784A, PER-826A and PER-785A) were treated for 72 h with increasing concentrations of (a) ARAC or (b) dexamethasone in the presence of ROM (1 nM) or bortezomib (2 or 5 nM). Cell viability was measured by alamarBlue and IC50 values were determined by normalizing to either DMSO controls (for dexamethasone or ARAC only treatment groups) or treatment with ROM or bortezomib only (for co-treated drug groups). Graphs display means of IC50, error bars represent 95% confidence intervals and P-values calculated by two-sample t-test (*P<0.05, **P<0.01, ***P<0.001). Drug combinations were evaluated in three replicate experiments; single-agent dexamethasone and ARAC IC50 were evaluated in six (PER-485A, PER-490A, PER-784A, PER-826A and PER-785A) or nine (PER-703A) replicates. Drug combination effects were not determined (ND) for bortezomib doses causing excessive cell death. (c) PER-485A or PER-490A cells were treated with increasing doses of ARAC or dexamethasone combined with ROM or bortezomib, at a fixed ratio with 1.2-fold incremental differences in drug concentrations. Cell viability was measured by alamarBlue at 72 h and synergy calculated by excess over Bliss. Bar graph displaying the sum of Bliss-excess scores (Bliss Volume) for each drug combination in cell lines PER-485A (green) and PER-490A (yellow). (d) PER-826A cells were treated with ARAC combined with HDACi drugs (ROM, panobinostat, mocetinostat and LAQ824) and synergy determined as described for (c).
Figure 4Conserved in vitro expression of HDAC repressors and modulators of ARAC cytotoxicity. (a) 22 subunits of HDAC-1/-2 repressor complexes were detected by RNA-seq. (b) Scatterplots of RNA-seq counts from primary samples (x axes) versus cell lines (y axes) with points coloured to show components of CoREST (red), NuRD (purple) and SIN (green) or IDR value (blue: IDR<0.05; grey: IDR>0.05). Genes of interest with IDR>0.05 are labelled within plot. (c) Twenty-six genes associated with the 'cytidine pathway'[30] were detected including five membrane-bound transporters, 10 cytosolic processing enzymes and 11 genes whose expression levels correlate with ARAC sensitivity. (d) Scatterplots as for (b) with points coloured to show genes whose expression correlates with ARAC cytotoxicity (white), genes involved in ARAC processing (yellow) and transport (orange) or IDR value (blue/grey).
Figure 5ROM modulates CDA expression and ARAC-induced γ-H2AX. (a) Protein extracted from PER-703A cells incubated with 1 nM ROM for 0, 2, 4, 6 or 8 h, were separated by SDS-PAGE and immunoblotted with antibodies against CDA, DCK and Actin. (b) Histogram of densitometric ratios for CDA:Actin immunoblots (n=2 independent experiments). (c) PER-785A and (d) PER-826A cells were treated with ROM and/or ARAC for 24 h, stained with PI and γ−H2AX and analyzed by flow cytometry. Total cells were defined excluding debris and dead cells; G0-G1, S- and G2-M phases of the cell cycle were gated on PI intensity; γ−H2AX-positive gates were defined by comparison to no drug controls. Graphs display the means of four independent experiments, error bars show s.d. and P-values calculated by one-way ANOVA and Tukey's multiple comparison tests (*P<0.05, **P<0.01, ***P<0.001, ****P<0.0001).
Figure 6ARAC and ROM combination reduces leukemia burden in iALL xenografts. (a) Schematic depiction of the timing of injections and dosing schedules in xenografted mice inoculated with 1 × 106 cells. (b) Leukemia infiltration in bone marrow, spleen and peripheral blood in mice xenografted with PER-785A (red) or PER-826A (blue) from two independent experiments. Leukemia burden in (c) PER-785A and (d) PER-826A xenografted mice was measured after 3-week treatment with 1 mg/kg twice/week ROM; 100 mg/kg ARAC three times/week; ROM and ARAC combined; or saline (n=5 for each group). ROM was given either 6 h (left panels 'Schedule 1') or 18 h (right panels 'Schedule 2') before ARAC. Mice were culled 4 days post last injection of drug, and bone marrow analyzed by flow cytometry with anti-human CD19-FITC antibody. Percentage of human leukemia cells and s.d. are plotted with P-values calculated by one-way ANOVA and Tukey's multiple comparison tests (*P<0.05, **P<0.01, ***P<0.001, ****P<0.0001).