| Literature DB >> 30542505 |
Shariful Islam1, Andrew L Paek2, Michael Hammer3, Savithri Rangarajan4, Robert Ruijtenbeek4, Laurence Cooke5, Eric Weterings6, Daruka Mahadevan5.
Abstract
Double-hit (DH) or double-expresser (DE) lymphomas are high-grade diffuse large B-cell lymphomas (DLBCL) that are mostly incurable with standard chemo-immunotherapy due to treatment resistance. The generation of drug-induced aneuploid/polyploid (DIAP) cells is a common effect of anti-DLBCL therapies (e.g. vincristine, doxorubicin). DIAP cells are thought to be responsible for treatment resistance, as they are capable of re-entering the cell cycle during off-therapy periods. Previously we have shown that combination of alisertib plus ibrutinib plus rituximab can partially abrogate DIAP cells and induce cell death. Here, we provide evidence that DIAP cells can re-enter the cell cycle and escape cell death during anti-DLBCL treatment. We also discuss MYC/BCL2 mediated molecular mechanism that underlie treatment resistance. We isolated aneuploid/polyploid populations of DH/DE-DLBCL cells after treatment with the aurora kinase (AK) inhibitor alisertib. Time-lapse microscopy of single polyploid cells revealed that following drug removal, a subset of these DIAP cells divide and proliferate by reductive cell divisions, including multipolar mitosis, meiosis-like nuclear fission and budding. Genomic, proteomic, and kinomic profiling demonstrated that alisertib-induced aneuploid/polyploid cells up-regulate DNA damage, DNA replication and immune evasion pathways. In addition, we identified amplified receptor tyrosine kinase and T-cell receptor signaling, as well as MYC-mediated dysregulation of the spindle assembly checkpoints RanGAP1, TPX2 and KPNA2. We infer that these factors contribute to treatment resistance of DIAP cells. These findings provide opportunities to develop novel DH/DE-DLBCL therapies, specifically targeting DIAP cells. KEY POINTS: ● MYC mediated upregulation of TPX2, KPNA2 and RanGAP1 dysregulate the spindle assembly checkpoint in drug-induced polyploid cells.● Drug-induced polyploid cells re-enter the cell cycle via multipolar mitosis, fission or budding, a mechanism of disease relapse.Entities:
Keywords: DLBCL; RanGAP1; TPX2; aneuploidy-polyploidy; aurora kinase
Year: 2018 PMID: 30542505 PMCID: PMC6267596 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.26251
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1DIAP cells are capable of undergoing reductive cell divisions
(a & b) Cell cycle analyses of U2932 & VAL cells respectively after treatment with 50nM alisertib for 4 days followed by recovery in the absence of drug up to 30-days shows that DLBCL cells establish a diploid 2n-near aneuploid population. (c) Polyploidy was induced by treating cells with 50nM alisertib for 4 days, then 8n-cells were sorted based on H2B-GFP expression and utilized forward scatter plot which correspond to cell size by FACS sorting followed by recovery of 8n-cells. Cell cycle analysis showed that with time 8n polyploid cells can shift back to 2n-near aneuploid cells. (e, f, g) Time-lapse single cell imaging of 8n cells (same as c), showed that polyploid cells can divide into aneuploid cells by multipolar mitosis, meiosis-like or budding-like cell division respectively compared to DMSO treated control cells by binary cell division (d).
Figure 2Enrichment of DIAP cells for genomic and proteomic analyses
(a) Flow data shows different populations of cells after treatment sorted using FACS with Hoechst-33342 staining. (b) Images of sorted cells. (c) Sample preparation and analysis workflow for RNA-Seq, Proteomic, and Kinome profiling.
Figure 3RNA sequencing of DIAP cells shows up-regulation of genes involved in DNA repair, DNA replication and immune response
(a) PCA (Principal component analysis) of control vs treated (8n) biological replicates. (b) Gene expression heat map showed that 1,234 genes were up-regulated, and 3,186 genes were down-regulated in all three biologic replicates in treatments vs. controls. (c) Profile plot showed that 404 up-regulated and 605 down-regulated genes follow the same pattern across treatment vs control in all biological replicates. (d) DAVID database search with up-regulated genes identify GO terms associated with DNA repair, DNA replication, immune response along with others. (e) Log2 fold change vs -log10 P-value visualization of genes associated with DNA repairs (red), DNA replication (green) and immune response (blue). All right most (same vertical line) genes were identified only in 8n-cells but not in DMSO control. On the other hand, all left most (same vertical line) genes were identified only in the DMSO control but absent in 8n-cells.
Figure 4Anti-apoptosis and cell proliferation in DIAP cells are a mechanism of therapy failure
Left panel (a, b, c, d & e) represents results from U2932 cells and right panel (f, g, h, i & j) represents results from VAL cells. (a & f). Principal component analysis (PCA) showed concordance among biological replicates and variance between control vs. treatment groups. (b & g). Heat map of protein expression treatment vs control. (c & h). Profile plot protein expression pattern respectively for both cell lines. (d & i). Top 20 enriched GO terms including negative regulation of apoptosis and positive regulation for cell proliferation respectively for U2932 and VAL cell lines. (e & j). Volcano plot shows 8 proteins are significantly up-regulated and 6 proteins are down-regulated in both cell lines. All right most (same vertical line) proteins identified only in 8n-cells but not in DMSO control. On the other hand, all left most (same vertical line) proteins identified only in DMSO control but absent in 8n-cells.
Figure 5DIAP cells dysregulate the mitotic spindle assembly checkpoint with over-expression of KPNA2, RAN-GAP1 and TPX2 to facilitate therapy failure
(a) Common up-regulated and down-regulated proteins in U2932 and VAL DIAP cells. (b) GO terms associated with common up-regulated and down-regulated proteins in the DAVID database. (c & d) BIOCARTA pathway analysis shows associated signaling pathway and proteins.
Figure 6Interactions among Myc, Bcl2 with KPNA2, Ran-GAP1, TPX2 and AK-A in DIAP cells expedite disease relapse
(a) STRING database shows interactions among up-regulated proteins with AK-A, Myc and Bcl2. (b & c) Western blotting confirmed up-regulated target proteins and their quantification after normalization. (d) Role of KPNA2, RanGAP1 and TPX2 in reductive cell division(s) in DIAP cells represented along with Myc, Bcl2 and AK.
List of top 20 peptides kinases that are significantly up-regulated in 8n cells vs. control
| SL# | Uniprot Accession | Protein-name | Peptide Sequence | Log2 FC_(8n/Ctl) | -log10 P-Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Q13164 | mitogen-activated protein kinase 7(MAPK7) | AEHQYFMTEYV A T | 1.49 | 2.30 |
| 2 | Q08999 | RB transcriptional corepressor like 2(RBL2) | VPTVSKGTVEGNY | 1.34 | 2.91 |
| 3 | Q15303 | erb-b2 receptor tyrosine kinase 4(ERBB4) | QALDNPEYHNASN | 1.29 | 2.51 |
| 4 | P46108 | CRK proto-oncogene, adaptor protein(CRK) | GPPEPGPYAQPSV | 1.20 | 1.96 |
| 5 | P07355 | annexin A2(ANXA2) | HSTPPSAYGSVKA | 1.15 | 3.11 |
| 6 | P06241 | FYN proto-oncogene, Src family tyrosine kinase(FYN) | TA TEPQYQPGENL | 1.15 | 1.83 |
| 7 | P17948 | fms related tyrosine kinase 1(FLT1) | DFGLARDIYKNPD | 1.14 | 3.47 |
| 8 | P27361 | mitogen-activated protein kinase 3(MAPK3) | GFLTEYV A TR | 1.14 | 2.66 |
| 9 | P11802 | cyclin dependent kinase 4(CDK4) | EIGVGAYGTVYKA | 1.07 | 2.69 |
| 10 | P09619 | platelet derived growth factor receptor beta(PDGFRB) | PNEGDNDYIIPLPDP | 0.99 | 1.86 |
| 11 | P54762 | EPH receptor B1(EPHB1) | DDTSDPTYTSSLG | 0.98 | 3.38 |
| 12 | P06401 | progesterone receptor(PGR) | EQRMKESSFYSLC | 0.98 | 1.64 |
| 13 | P53778 | mitogen-activated protein kinase 12(MAPK12) | SEBTGYVVTR | 0.97 | 1.43 |
| 14 | P20963 | CD247 molecule(CD247) | KDKMAEAYSEIGM | 0.96 | 3.02 |
| 15 | Q14765 | signal transducer and activator of transcription 4(STAT4) | PSDLLPMSPSVY A | 0.96 | 2.18 |
| 16 | Q15375 | EPH receptor A7(EPHA7) | TYIDPETYEDPNR | 0.95 | 4.88 |
| 17 | Q02763 | SRGQEVYVKKTMG | 0.93 | 1.34 | |
| 18 | P22681 | Cbl proto-oncogene(CBL) | EGEEDTEYMTPSS | 0.93 | 1.43 |
| 19 | P20963 | CD247 molecule(CD247) | DKMAEAYSEIGMK | 0.92 | 2.32 |
| 20 | P07332 | FES proto-oncogene, tyrosine kinase(FES) | REEADGVYAASGG | 0.91 | 3.61 |
Top 20 GO term associated with significantly up regulated kinases after searching in DAVID database
| SL# | GO ID | Term | Count | P-Value | Genes (Uniprot Accession) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | GO:0018108 | peptidyl-tyrosine phosphorylation | 7 | 5.91E-09 | P54762, P07332, P09619, P06241, P17948, Q15303, Q15375 |
| 2 | GO:0000165 | MAPK cascade | 6 | 4.72E-06 | P09619, P06241, P27361, P53778, Q13164, Q15303 |
| 3 | GO:0007165 | signal transduction | 6 | 0.00480611 | P06401, P09619, P11802, P53778, Q13164, Q15303 |
| 4 | GO:0006351 | transcription, DNA-templated | 6 | 0.0397312 | P06401, Q08999, Q14765, P27361, P53778, Q15303 |
| 5 | GO:0014068 | positive regulation of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase signaling | 5 | 4.69E-07 | P09619, P22681, P06241, P17948, Q15303 |
| 6 | GO:0046777 | protein autophosphorylation | 5 | 2.28E-05 | P54762, P07332, P09619, P17948, Q15303 |
| 7 | GO:0038083 | peptidyl-tyrosine autophosphorylation | 4 | 8.32E-06 | P07332, P06241, P27361, Q15303 |
| 8 | GO:0048010 | vascular endothelial growth factor receptor signaling pathway | 4 | 4.92E-05 | P06241, P53778, P17948, P46108 |
| 9 | GO:0014066 | regulation of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase signaling | 4 | 6.26E-05 | P09619, P06241, P27361, Q15303 |
| 10 | GO:0048013 | ephrin receptor signaling pathway | 4 | 8.37E-05 | P54762, P06241, Q15375, P46108 |
| 11 | GO:0001934 | positive regulation of protein phosphorylation | 4 | 2.66E-04 | P07355, P27361, Q15303, Q15375 |
| 12 | GO:0038096 | Fc-gamma receptor signaling pathway involved in phagocytosis | 4 | 2.66E-04 | P20963, P06241, P27361, P46108 |
| 13 | GO:0016477 | cell migration | 4 | 6.46E-04 | P09619, P06241, P17948, Q15303 |
| 14 | GO:0043066 | negative regulation of apoptotic process | 4 | 0.01012794 | P09619, P22681, Q13164, Q15303 |
| 15 | GO:0006468 | protein phosphorylation | 4 | 0.01018863 | P07332, P11802, P06241, P27361 |
| 16 | GO:0008284 | positive regulation of cell proliferation | 4 | 0.01080736 | P09619, P11802, P17948, Q15303 |
| 17 | GO:0045944 | positive regulation of transcription from RNA polymerase II promoter | 4 | 0.0732784 | P06401, Q14765, P27361, Q13164 |
| 18 | GO:0036120 | cellular response to platelet-derived growth factor stimulus | 3 | 1.46E-04 | P09619, P22681, P06241 |
| 19 | GO:0043552 | positive regulation of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase activity | 3 | 4.41E-04 | P09619, P17948, Q15303 |
| 20 | GO:0048146 | positive regulation of fibroblast proliferation | 3 | 0.0013384 | P07355, P09619, P11802 |
Top 10 tyrosine kinase signaling pathways identified by KEGG analysis
| SL# | KEGG ID | Term | Count | P-Value | Genes (Uniprot Accession) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | hsa04660 | T cell receptor signaling pathway | 6 | 2.56E-06 | P20963, P22681, P11802, P06241, P27361, P53778 |
| 2 | hsa04360 | Axon guidance | 5 | 1.67E-04 | P54762, P07332, P06241, P27361, Q15375 |
| 3 | hsa04510 | Focal adhesion | 5 | 0.00105318 | P09619, P06241, P27361, P17948, P46108 |
| 4 | hsa04015 | Rap1 signaling pathway | 5 | 0.00113164 | P09619, P27361, P53778, P17948, P46108 |
| 5 | hsa04010 | MAPK signaling pathway | 5 | 0.00232085 | P09619, P27361, P53778, Q13164, P46108 |
| 6 | hsa04151 | PI3K-Akt signaling pathway | 5 | 0.00688865 | Q08999, P09619, P11802, P27361, P17948 |
| 7 | hsa05200 | Pathways in cancer | 5 | 0.01085798 | P09619, P22681, P11802, P27361, P46108 |
| 8 | hsa05220 | Chronic myeloid leukemia | 4 | 5.51E-04 | P22681, P11802, P27361, P46108 |
| 9 | hsa04012 | ErbB signaling pathway | 4 | 9.59E-04 | P22681, P27361, Q15303, P46108 |
| 10 | hsa04722 | Neurotrophin signaling pathway | 4 | 0.0024249 | P27361, P53778, Q13164, P46108 |