| Literature DB >> 29799846 |
Olga Ksionda1, Marsilius Mues1, Anica M Wandler2, Lisa Donker1, Milou Tenhagen1, Jesse Jun1, Gregory S Ducker3, Ksenia Matlawska-Wasowska4, Kevin Shannon2, Kevan M Shokat3, Jeroen P Roose1.
Abstract
T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) is an aggressive hematologic cancer. Poly-chemotherapy with cytotoxic and genotoxic drugs causes substantial toxicity and more specific therapies targeting the underlying molecular lesions are highly desired. Perturbed Ras signaling is prevalent in T-ALL and occurs via oncogenic RAS mutations or through overexpression of the Ras activator RasGRP1 in ~65% of T-ALL patients. Effective small molecule inhibitors for either target do not currently exist. Genetic and biochemical evidence link phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) signals to T-ALL, PI3Ks are activated by Ras-dependent and Ras-independent mechanisms, and potent PI3K inhibitors exist. Here we performed comprehensive analyses of PI3K-Akt signaling in T-ALL with a focus on class I PI3K. We developed a multiplex, multiparameter flow cytometry platform with pan- and isoform-specific PI3K inhibitors. We find that pan-PI3K and PI3K γ-specific inhibitors effectively block basal and cytokine-induced PI3K-Akt signals. Despite such inhibition, GDC0941 (pan-PI3K) or AS-605240 (PI3Kγ-specific) as single agents did not efficiently induce death in T-ALL cell lines. Combination of GDC0941 with AS-605240, maximally targeting all p110 isoforms, exhibited potent synergistic activity for clonal T-ALL lines in vitro, which motivated us to perform preclinical trials in mice. In contrast to clonal T-ALL lines, we used a T-ALL cancer model that recapitulates the multi-step pathogenesis and inter- and intra-tumoral genetic heterogeneity, a hallmark of advanced human cancers. We found that the combination of GDC0941 with AS-605240 fails in such trials. Our results reveal that PI3K inhibitors are a promising avenue for molecular therapy in T-ALL, but predict the requirement for methods that can resolve biochemical signals in heterogeneous cell populations so that combination therapy can be designed in a rational manner.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29799846 PMCID: PMC5969748 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0193849
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1PI3K-Akt signals in T cell leukemia are affected by doxorubicin treatment.
A-C. Western blot analysis of basal and cytokine-induced p-Akt (S473) in mouse (A-B) and human T-ALL cell lines (C). 1156, 1713, T-ALL C6 and C7 are mouse T-ALL cell lines with leukemia virus insertions in RasGRP1 causing RasGRP1 overexpression (A). T-ALL 3, T-ALL 9 and T-ALL 15 are mouse T-ALL cell lines which harbor a KRasG12D mutation. Representative blots of three or more (A & B) and two (C) independent experiments. Blotting for total Akt or αTubulin serves to demonstrate equal loading.