| Literature DB >> 28203307 |
Mark E Issa1, Farnaz Sedigheh Takhsha2, Wim Vanden Berghe2, Muriel Cuendet1, Chandra Sekhar Chirumamilla2, Claudina Perez-Novo2.
Abstract
Multiple myeloma (MM) is a hematological malignancy, which remains incurable because most patients eventually relapse or become refractory to current treatments. Due to heterogeneity within the cancer cell microenvironment, cancer cell populations employ a dynamic survival strategy to chemotherapeutic treatments, which frequently results in a rapid acquisition of therapy resistance. Besides resistance-conferring genetic alterations within a tumor cell population selected during drug treatment, recent findings also reveal non-mutational mechanisms of drug resistance, involving a small population of "cancer stem cells" (CSCs) which are intrinsically more refractory to the effects of a variety of anticancer drugs. Other studies have implicated epigenetic mechanisms in reversible drug tolerance to protect the population from eradication by potentially lethal exposures, suggesting that acquired drug resistance does not necessarily require a stable heritable genetic alteration. Clonal evolution of MM cells and the bone marrow microenvironment changes contribute to drug resistance. MM-CSCs may not be a static population and survive as phenotypically and functionally different cell types via the transition between stem-like and non-stem-like states in local microenvironments, as observed in other types of cancers. Targeting MM-CSCs is clinically relevant, and different approaches have been suggested to target molecular, metabolic and epigenetic signatures, and the self-renewal signaling characteristic of MM CSC-like cells. Here, we summarize epigenetic strategies to reverse drug resistance in heterogeneous multiple myeloma.Entities:
Keywords: Combination therapy; Drug resistance; Epigenetic drugs; Microenvironment; Multiple myeloma; Stem cells; Treatment
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28203307 PMCID: PMC5303245 DOI: 10.1186/s13148-017-0319-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Epigenetics ISSN: 1868-7075 Impact factor: 6.551
Fig. 1Epigenetic changes of specific target genes in MM related to cancer hallmarks (based on [8–16, 130, 131])
Summary of genetic mutations in epigenetic writer-reader-eraser proteins or histones in MM
| Mutations epigenetic writer, reader, or eraser enzymes | Epigenetic activity, mutation info | References |
| DNMT3A, TET2 | DNA (hydroxy)methylation, LOF | [ |
| ARID1A/2/4A/5B | SWI-SNF chromatin remodelling, LOF | [ |
| CHD2/4 | Chromodomain, Missense, frameshift mutations, LOF | [ |
| SETD2/B2 | Histone H3K9 methylase, LOF | [ |
| UTX/KDM6A | Histone H3K27 demethylase, Missense mutations, LOF | [ |
| UTY | Histone H3K27demethylase, LOF | [ |
| EZH2 | Histone H3K27 methylase, LOF | [ |
| MMSET/NSD2/WHSC1 | Histone H3K36K27 (de)methylase, translocation, point mutations, LOF/GOF | [ |
| MLL1/2/3/4/5 | Histone H3K4 methylase, Missense/nonsense/frameshift/splice-site mutations, LOF | [ |
| EHMT2 | Histone H3K9 methylase, | [ |
| KDM3B | Histone H3K9 demethylase, missense/nonsense/splice-site mutations | [ |
| EP300/CREBBP | Histone acetylase, missense/nonsense/frameshift mutations, LOF | [ |
| Histone mutations | Histone variant | Reference |
| HIST1H1B/C/D/E | Core/linker histone, | [ |
Summary of key epigenetic modifications found in MM and their therapeutic agent when available
| Cancer cells | Epigenetic target/pathway | Epigenetic alteration | Therapeutic agent | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gastric | PTCH-1/HH | Hypermethylation | 5-AZA | [ |
| Liver, pancreatic | HHIP/HH | Hypermethylation | [ | |
| MM | JAG-2/Notch | Hyperacetylation | [ | |
| MB | HES1/Notch | miRNA-199b-5p | 5-AZA | [ |
| Colon | Notch1/Notch | miRNA-34a | [ | |
| MM | β-catenin/Wnt | Hypermethylation | [ | |
| MM | E-cadherin/Wnt | miRNA-23A | [ | |
| MM | HDACs | acetylation | PNB | [ |
| MM | HDAC6 | acetylation | RCL | [ |
5-AZA 5-azacytidine, MB medulloblastoma, MM multiple myeloma, PNB panobinostat, RCL ricolinostat
Overview of published clinical trial studies of epigenetic drugs in MM
| Epigenetic function | Compound | Phase | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| BET inhibitor | OTX015/MK-8628 | I | [ |
| BET inhibitor | CPI-0610 | I | [ |
| BET inhibitor | GSK525762 | I/II | [ |
| DNMT/HDAC inhibitor | Azacitidine/phenylbutyrate | III | [ |
| HDAC inhibitor | Abexinostat | I | [ |
| HDAC inhibitor | Belinostat | II | [ |
| HDAC inhibitor | CI-994 | II | [ |
| HDAC inhibitor | CUDC-907 | I | [ |
| HDAC inhibitor | Entinostat | I | [ |
| HDAC inhibitor | ITF2357 | II | [ |
| HDAC inhibitor | Panobinostat | II | [ |
| HDAC inhibitor | Panobinostat in combination with bortezomib and dexamethasone | FDA approved | [ |
| HDAC inhibitor | Panobinostat in combination with everolimus | I/II | [ |
| HDAC inhibitor | Rocilinostat | I/II | [ |
| HDAC inhibitor | Tefinostat | I | [ |
| HDAC inhibitor | Valproate | I | [ |
| HDAC inhibitor | Vorinostat | I/II | [ |
| HAT inhibitor | Curcumin | Preliminary clinical study | [ |