| Literature DB >> 30612952 |
Andrej Besse1, Lenka Besse2, Marianne Kraus1, Max Mendez-Lopez1, Jürgen Bader1, Bo-Tao Xin3, Gerjan de Bruin3, Elmer Maurits3, Herman S Overkleeft3, Christoph Driessen1.
Abstract
Proteasome inhibitors (PIs) are a backbone of multiple myeloma (MM) therapy. The proteasome harbors six proteolytically active subunits (β1, β2, β5), while β5 was identified as rate-limiting and is a primary target of clinically available PIs. The most effective pattern of subunit inhibition provided by these PIs for cytotoxic activity in MM is unknown. A head-to-head comparison of clinically available PIs shows that in the clinically relevant setting only the co-inhibition of β1 or β2 with β5 activity achieves meaningful functional proteasome inhibition and cytotoxicity, while the selective β2/β5 inhibition of both constitutive and immunoproteasome is the most cytotoxic. In the long-term setting, selective inhibition of β5 subunit is sufficient to induce cytotoxicity in PI-sensitive, but not in PI-resistant MM, and the β5/β2 co-inhibition is the most cytotoxic in PI-resistant MM. These results give a rational basis for selecting individual PIs for the treatment of MM.Entities:
Keywords: activity-based probes; bortezomib; carfilzomib; multiple myeloma; proteasome; proteasome inhibitors; resistance
Year: 2019 PMID: 30612952 DOI: 10.1016/j.chembiol.2018.11.007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Chem Biol ISSN: 2451-9448 Impact factor: 8.116