| Literature DB >> 29316665 |
Raquel C Maia1, Flavia C Vasconcelos2, Paloma S Souza3, Vivian M Rumjanek4.
Abstract
Abstract: The introduction of imatinib (IM), a BCR-ABL1 tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI), has represented a significant advance in the first-line treatment of chronic myeloid leukemia (CML). However, approximately 30% of patients need to discontinue IM due to resistance or intolerance to this drug. Both resistance and intolerance have also been observed in treatment with the second-generation TKIs-dasatinib, nilotinib, and bosutinib-and the third-generation TKI-ponatinib. The mechanisms of resistance to TKIs may be BCR-ABL1-dependent and/or BCR-ABL1-independent. Although the role of efflux pump P-glycoprotein (Pgp), codified by the ABCB1 gene, is unquestionable in drug resistance of many neoplasms, a longstanding question exists about whether Pgp has a firm implication in TKI resistance in the clinical scenario. The goal of this review is to offer an overview of ABCB1/Pgp expression/activity/polymorphisms in CML. Understanding how interactions, associations, or cooperation between Pgp and other molecules-such as inhibitor apoptosis proteins, microRNAs, or microvesicles-impact IM resistance risk may be critical in evaluating the response to TKIs in CML patients. In addition, new non-TKI compounds may be necessary in order to overcome the resistance mediated by Pgp in CML.Entities:
Keywords: P-glycoprotein; chronic myeloid leukemia; drug resistance; inhibitor apoptosis proteins; microRNAs; microvesicles; new compounds; tyrosine kinase inhibitor
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29316665 PMCID: PMC6017716 DOI: 10.3390/molecules23010119
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
ABCB1/Pgp/expression/activity in samples from chronic myeloid leukemia patients.
| Method | Number of Samples | Clinical Relevance | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tetramethylrosamine assay | 34 | Samples from patients with newly diagnosed CML showed resistance in comparison with cells from healthy donors. In later CML phases, samples exhibited more resistant profiles than samples on diagnosis of the disease. | [ |
| Rho-123 assay and Pgp expression | 62 | Samples of patients in different CML phases, before or after receiving treatment, were analyzed. Pgp activity was present in 80% and Pgp expression in 84% of samples. The MDR phenotype was independent of the CML phase | [ |
| Rho-123 assay and Pgp expression | 245 | Pgp expression and activity were present in all CML phases. The blast phase had the highest activity levels compared to chronic phase. | [ |
| Rho-123 + CSA assay | 55 | IM-resistant samples exhibited higher Pgp activity levels than the IM-sensitive ones. Greater Pgp activity (65.95%) was detected compared to BCRP activity (41.81%). There was no difference among the CML phases in relation to the frequency of Pgp positivity. | [ |
| Rho-123 assay and Pgp expression | 224 | Pgp expression, but not Rho-123 efflux assay, showed differences between responder and non-responder IM-treated chronic phase patients. | [ |
| Rho-123 assay and Pgp expression | 38 | Seventeen patients (44.7%) presented higher median Pgp expression levels in the advanced phased compared to the chronic phase. Pgp activity was found in 47.4% patients but this was not related to the CML phase. | [ |
| 30 | In samples analyzed on diagnosis of CML, there was no difference between | [ | |
| 63 | There was no difference between | [ | |
| 68 | In most samples on diagnosis of CML (84%), low | [ | |
| 83 | In the chronic phase of CML, high | [ | |
| 155 | Patients in the chronic phase with increased levels of | [ |
CML = chronic myeloid leukemia; MMR = major molecular response; EMR = early molecular response; IM = imatinib; Rho-123 = Rhodamine-123; Pgp = glycoprotein-P; Rho + CSA = Rhodamine-123 + Cyclosporin A; PhA + FTC = Pheophorbide + fumitremorgin C.
Figure 1Multidrug resistance in chronic myeloid leukemia. P-glycoprotein (Pgp) expression in chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) cells promotes tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKI) efflux and a consequent reduction of intracellular drug concentration. On the other hand, some single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) may reduce Pgp drug efflux activity and then TKIs can inhibit Bcr-Abl protein. However, high intracellular drug concentration may induce Pgp mRNA transcription. Pgp may also contribute to apoptosis inhibition through IAP proteins (survivin and XIAP). Nevertheless, the new compound LQB-118 could overcome MDR through ROS induction, NFκB pathway inhibition, and IAP downregulation. Anyway CML cells release cellular microvesicles (MV) carrying oncogenic molecules whose cargo can be transferred to microenvironment cells.