| Literature DB >> 28196522 |
Vincent Camus1,2, Hadjer Miloudi1, Antoine Taly3, Brigitte Sola4, Fabrice Jardin1,2.
Abstract
Many recent publications highlight the large role of the pivotal eukaryotic nuclear export protein exportin-1 (XPO1) in the oncogenesis of several malignancies, and there is emerging evidence that XPO1 inhibition is a key target against cancer. The clinical validation of the pharmacological inhibition of XPO1 was recently achieved with the development of the selective inhibitor of nuclear export compounds, displaying an interesting anti-tumor activity in patients with massive pre-treated hematological malignancies. Recent reports have shown molecular alterations in the gene encoding XPO1 and showed a mutation hotspot (E571K) in the following two hematological malignancies with similar phenotypes and natural histories: primary mediastinal diffuse large B cell lymphoma and classical Hodgkin's lymphoma. Emerging evidence suggests that the mutant XPO1 E571K plays a role in carcinogenesis, and this variant is quantifiable in tumor and plasma cell-free DNA of patients using highly sensitive molecular biology techniques, such as digital PCR and next-generation sequencing. Therefore, it was proposed that the XPO1 E571K variant may serve as a minimal residual disease tool in this setting. To clarify and summarize the recent findings on the role of XPO1 in B cell hematological malignancies, we conducted a literature search to present the major publications establishing the landscape of XPO1 molecular alterations, their impact on the XPO1 protein, their interest as biomarkers, and investigations into the development of new XPO1-targeted therapies in B cell hematological malignancies.Entities:
Keywords: Exportin; Lymphoma; Minimal residual disease; Targeted therapy; XPO1
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28196522 PMCID: PMC5307790 DOI: 10.1186/s13045-017-0412-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hematol Oncol ISSN: 1756-8722 Impact factor: 17.388
Fig. 1Schematic representation of XPO1-mediated nuclear export. RanGDP (D) is converted to RanGTP (T) through the action of RCC1 (the Ran guanine exchange factor). The export complex composed of RanGTP, cargo (C), and XPO1 (X) proteins shuttles through the nuclear pore complex (NPC) into the cytoplasm where RanGTP is dephosphorylated by the action of RanGAP, the Ran GTPase-activating protein. Cargo/XPO1 complexes are dissociated, and XPO1 shuttles back to the nucleus for further rounds of nuclear export
Fig. 23D-XPO1 conformations illustrating its interaction with RanGTP, RanGTP-SNUPN, LMB, and KPT-285. (a) Ring-shaped XPO1 is colored blue to red in rainbow colors along the chain from the N-terminus to the C-terminus, showing the C-helix (red) autoinhibitory activity (PDB-ID 4FGV) [96], (b) XPO1 complexed with snurportin 1 (SNUPN) (PDB-ID 3GB8) [27], (c) with RanGTP, in magenta (PDB-ID 5DIS) [97], or (d) with both proteins (PDB-ID 3NC1) [28]. XPO1 inhibitors LMB (e) or KPT-185 (f) (both in red and arrowed) interacting with XPO1-RanGTP-RanBP1 (in gray) (PDB-ID, 4HAT [98], and 4GMX [9])
Fig. 3Positron emission tomography (PET) and digital PCR plots from a biopsy specimen and plasma cell-free DNA from a classical Hodgkin lymphoma patient with mediastinal involvement. Representative views of digital PCR (dPCR) plots (mutant samples) for XPO1 E571K quantification in a tumor (VAF = 0.3%, left) and plasma cell-free DNA (cfDNA) (VAF = 0.15%, right) from a cHL patient at diagnosis by droplet dPCR (Biorad). Data are displayed in a scatter plot based on the color of FAM and VIC events. Green, blue, orange, and black plots represent wild-type alleles, mutant alleles, both alleles in the same droplet, or no amplifications, respectively. VAF, variant allele fraction
Fig. 4Chemical structures of leptomycin B and two SINE compounds. Chemical structures have been obtained from [99]
Pre-clinical in vitro and in vivo studies of KPT compounds on hematological malignancies
| Disease | XPO1 gene and protein | SINE | Effects | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AML | KPT-185 | Induces apoptosis | [ | |
| KPT-276 | Increases survival of FLT3-ITD+-MV4.11 mice | |||
| CLL | High XPO1 expression | KPT-185 | Inhibits nuclear export | [ |
| T-ALL | KPT-185 | Induce apoptosis in vitro and in vivo | [ | |
| KPT-330 | Promote cell cycle arrest in G1 | |||
| AML | High XPO1 expression | KPT-185 | Inhibits nuclear export | |
| AML | KPT-330 | Inhibits XPO1/cargo interactions and nuclear export | [ | |
| KPT-251 | Induces apoptosis | |||
| MCL | High XPO1 expression | KPT-185 | Blocks nuclear export | [ |
| KPT-276 | Induces apoptosis in a p53-independent manner | |||
| MM | High XPO1 expression | KPT-276 | Induces cell apoptosis in vitro and in vivo | [ |
| MM | High XPO1 expression | KPT-185 | Inhibit nuclear export | [ |
| KPT-330 | Induce apoposis and alleviate CAM-DR | |||
| NHL | KPT-185 | Inhibits cell growth | [ | |
| Ph + ALL | High XPO1 expression | KPT-330 | Induces apoptosis both p53-dependent and -independent | [ |
| CLL | KPT-330 | Suppresses effectors of BCR signaling in vitro and in vivo via BTK depletion | [ | |
| HL | Mutation E571K | KPT-185 | Inhibits cell line proliferation and induces apoptosis whatever XPO1 status | [ |
| PMBL | Mutation E571K | KPT-185 | Inhibits cell line proliferation and induces apoptosis whatever XPO1 status | [ |
| AML/CLL/DLBCL | KPT-8602 | Inhibits XPO1/cargo interactions and nuclear export | [ |
Abbreviations: ABC activated B cell like, ALL acute lymphoid leukemia, AML acute myeloid leukemia, BCR B cell receptor, BRD4 bromodomain-containing protein 4, BTK Bruton tyrosine kinase, CAM-DR cell adhesion-mediated drug resistance, CDC25A cell division cycle 25 homolog A, CLL chronic lymphoid leukemia, DLBCL diffuse large B cell lymphoma, FLT3 FMS-like tyrosine kinase, GC germinal center, IL interleukin, ITD internal tandem duplication, HL Hodgkin lymphoma, hnRNP heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein, MCL mantle cell lymphoma, MDM2 human homolog of mouse double minute 2, MM multiple myeloma, NHL non-Hodgkin lymphoma, PP2A protein phosphatase 2A, PMBL primary mediastinal B cell lymphoma, TNF tumor necrosis factor, TSP tumor suppressor protein
Clinical trials in lymphoid malignancies testing selinexor as single agent or in combination
| NCT | Phase | Lymphoid malignancy | Therapeutic strategy/combination | Estimated enrollment | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT01607892 | I | Hematologic malignancies | Selinexor | 285 | Not recruiting |
| NCT02138786 | II | Richter’s transformation lymphoma | Selinexor | 26 | Terminated |
| NCT02186834 | I/II | MM | Selinexor, liposomal doxorubicin, dexamethasone | 47 | Recruiting |
| NCT02199665 | I | MM | Selinexor, carfilzomib, dexamethasone | 48 | Recruiting |
| NCT02227251 | II | R/R DLBCL | Selinexor | 200 | Recruiting |
| NCT02303392 | I | CLL, lymphoma | Selinexor, ibrutinib | 92 | Recruiting |
| NCT02314247 | II | TCL | Selinexor | 16 | Terminated |
| NCT02336815 | II | MM | Selinexor, dexamethasone | 210 | Recruiting |
| NCT02343042 | I/II | MM | Selinexor, dexamethasone, bortezomib, pomalidomide | 201 | Recruiting |
| NCT02389543 | I/II | MM | Selinexor, lenalidomide, dexamethasone | 34 | Withdrawn |
| NCT02471911 | I | R/R aggressive B cell lymphoma | Selinexor, rituximab, etoposide, carboplatin, ifosfamide, dexamethasone | 18 | Recruiting |
| NCT02741388 | I | R/R B cell lymphoma | Selinexor, rituximab, dexamethasone, oxaliplatin, cisplatin, cytarabine, gemcitabine | 60 | Recruiting |
Data are from ClinicalTrials.gov [104]
Abbreviations: CLL chronic lymphoid leukemia, MM multiple myeloma, R/R refractory/relapse, TCL T-cell lymphoid leukemia