| Literature DB >> 29317454 |
Pavlina Janovska1,2, Jan Verner1,3, Jiri Kohoutek4, Lenka Bryjova1, Michaela Gregorova1, Marta Dzimkova4, Hana Skabrahova3, Tomasz Radaszkiewicz1, Petra Ovesna5, Olga Vondalova Blanarova1, Tereza Nemcova1, Zuzana Hoferova2, Katerina Vasickova6,7, Lucie Smyckova1, Alexander Egle8, Sarka Pavlova3,9, Lucie Poppova3,9, Karla Plevova3,9, Sarka Pospisilova3,9, Vitezslav Bryja1,2.
Abstract
Casein kinase 1δ/ε (CK1δ/ε) is a key component of noncanonical Wnt signaling pathways, which were shown previously to drive pathogenesis of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). In this study, we investigated thoroughly the effects of CK1δ/ε inhibition on the primary CLL cells and analyzed the therapeutic potential in vivo using 2 murine model systems based on the Eµ-TCL1-induced leukemia (syngeneic adoptive transfer model and spontaneous disease development), which resembles closely human CLL. We can demonstrate that the CK1δ/ε inhibitor PF-670462 significantly blocks microenvironmental interactions (chemotaxis, invasion and communication with stromal cells) in primary CLL cells in all major subtypes of CLL. In the mouse models, CK1 inhibition slows down accumulation of leukemic cells in the peripheral blood and spleen and prevents onset of anemia. As a consequence, PF-670462 treatment results in a significantly longer overall survival. Importantly, CK1 inhibition has synergistic effects to the B-cell receptor (BCR) inhibitors such as ibrutinib in vitro and significantly improves ibrutinib effects in vivo. Mice treated with a combination of PF-670462 and ibrutinib show the slowest progression of disease and survive significantly longer compared with ibrutinib-only treatment when the therapy is discontinued. In summary, this preclinical testing of CK1δ/ε inhibitor PF-670462 demonstrates that CK1 may serve as a novel therapeutic target in CLL, acting in synergy with BCR inhibitors. Our work provides evidence that targeting CK1 can represent an alternative or addition to the therapeutic strategies based on BCR signaling and antiapoptotic signaling (BCL-2) inhibition.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29317454 DOI: 10.1182/blood-2017-05-786947
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 22.113