| Literature DB >> 31519186 |
Fang Wang1, Huanhuan Lv1,2,3, Bin Zhao1, Liangfu Zhou1, Shenghang Wang1, Jie Luo1, Junyu Liu1, Peng Shang4,5.
Abstract
Iron, an indispensable element for life, is involved in all kinds of important physiological activities. Iron promotes cell growth and proliferation, but it also causes oxidative stress damage. The body has a strict regulation mechanism of iron metabolism due to its potential toxicity. As a cancer of the bone marrow and blood cells, leukemia threatens human health seriously. Current studies suggest that dysregulation of iron metabolism and subsequent accumulation of excess iron are closely associated with the occurrence and progress of leukemia. Specifically, excess iron promotes the development of leukemia due to the pro-oxidative nature of iron and its damaging effects on DNA. On the other hand, leukemia cells acquire large amounts of iron to maintain rapid growth and proliferation. Therefore, targeting iron metabolism may provide new insights for approaches to the treatment of leukemia. This review summarizes physiologic iron metabolism, alternations of iron metabolism in leukemia and therapeutic opportunities of targeting the altered iron metabolism in leukemia, with a focus on acute leukemia.Entities:
Keywords: Ferroptosis; Iron; Iron-based nanoparticles; Leukemia; Reactive oxygen species
Mesh:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31519186 PMCID: PMC6743129 DOI: 10.1186/s13046-019-1397-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Clin Cancer Res ISSN: 0392-9078
Fig. 1Alternations of iron metabolism in leukemia at systemic and cellular levels. a The systematic iron pool and serum ferritin levels are increased which is aggravated by multiple red-blood-cell transfusions. Hepcidin is induced to block the delivery of iron into the circulation from enterocytes, macrophages and some other cells. b Leukemia cells show increased iron uptake and decreased iron efflux, leading to elevated cellular iron levels. Proteins related to iron uptake such as TfR1, TfR2 and STEAP1 are overexpressed and absorption of NTBI is increased. However, the expression of iron export protein FPN1 is decreased. HFE or c-MYC gene variants are also associated with elevated intracellular iron levels in leukemia cells
Fig. 2Therapeutic opportunities of targeting iron metabolism in leukemia cells. Iron deprivation by iron chelators or targeting iron metabolism related proteins induces differentiation, apoptosis and cell cycle arrest in leukemia cells. The generation of ROS is involved in the process of inducing cell differentiation. Iron chelators also play anti-leukemia roles through iron-independently regulating multiple signaling pathways or restoring GVL. ADCC is also involved in the anti-leukemia effect of targeting iron metabolism related proteins. Iron metabolism related proteins-targeted delivery systems or iron-based nanoparticles can selectively deliver therapeutic agents into leukemia cells to play enhanced anti-leukemia activity. Furthermore, iron-based nanoparticles elevate iron-catalyzed ROS levels, leading to increased cytotoxicity. Ferroptosis inducers perturb redox balance based on the high intracellular iron levels to induce ferroptosis in leukemia cells
Summary on the role of iron chelators in leukemia
| Name | Properties | Type of leukemia | Mode of action | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| DFO | FDA-approved iron chelator | AML, ALL | Inhibits proliferation, induces apoptosis, differentiation and G1/S cell cycle arrest; inhibits ribonucleotide reductase, decreases the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p21CIP1/WAF1 protein, induces ROS generation, activates IFN-γ/STAT1 and MAPK pathway. | [ |
| DFX | FDA-approved iron chelator | AML, ALL | Inhibits proliferation and induces differentiation; induces ROS generation, inhibits NF-κB and mTOR signaling pathway, restores GVL. | [ |
| 3-AP | 3-aminopyridine-2-carboxaldehyde thiosemicarbazone | AML, ALL | Inhibits ribonucleotide reductase. | [ |
| SIHA | Tridentate iron chelator | AML | Induces apoptosis, cell cycle arrest and dissipation of the mitochondrial membrane potential. | [ |
| Dp44mT | Di-pyridylketone thiosemicarbazone | AML, ALL | Induces apoptosis and G1/S cell cycle arrest; activates MAPK pathway. | [ |
| EP | Thrombopoietin receptor agonist | AML | Induces differentiation and G1 cell cycle arrest. | [ |
| CPX | Fungicide | AML, ALL, CML | Inhibits ribonucleotide reductase. | [ |
Basic characteristics of clinical trials on iron chelators in the treatment of leukemia
| Name | Trial ID | Status | Design | N | Condition | Treatment | Outcome (/Measures) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DFO | NCT00658411 | Terminated | SGA | 5 | AL, MDS | DFO (50 mg/kg/d) for ≥2 weeks prior to HSCT. | At a median follow-up of 20 months, no patient relapsed or died. Estimated 2-year OS and PFS are both 100%. No patient developed grade III/IV acute GVHD or VOD. |
| DFX | NCT03659084 | Recruiting | PCS | 150 | AML, MDS | DFX (10 mg/kg/d) at 6 months after allograft, for 3–6 months. | RFS (at 2 years), cumulative incidence of GVHD (at 3 months, 1 and 2 years) and toxicity of DFX (an average of 4 years). |
| NCT02413021 | Unknown | RCT | 40 | AL | Ara-C (20 mg/m2 bid, for 10 days, repeated every 30 days) with or without DFX (20 mg/kg/d) | CR or PR (at first month). | |
| NCT02341495 | Unknown | SGA | 29 | AML (age ≥ 65 years) | DFX (20 mg/kg/d) with VD3 (4000 IU/d) and Azacitidine (75 mg/m2/d) on d1–7, repeated every 28 days for 8 cycles. | CR, OS, PFS and DOR (up to 5 years). | |
| 3-AP | NCT00064090 | Completed | Ph-I | 32 | AL, MDS | 3-AP (105 mg/m2/d) followed by Ara-C (100–800 mg/m2/d) on days 1–5, repeated every 21 days for up to 6 courses in the absence of PD or toxicity. | Of 31 evaluable patients, 4 (13%) achieved a CR. The median DOR for responders was 36 weeks. The median OS for all patients and responders was 30.9 weeks and 12.6 weeks, respectively. DLTs included mucositis, neutropenic colitis, neuropathy and hyperbilirubinemia. |
| NCT00077181 | Completed | Ph-I | 25 | AML, CML-AP | Ara-C (100 mg/m2/d, d1–5) and 3-AP (50/75/100 mg/m2/d, d2–5), repeated every 28 days for up to 4 courses in the absence of PD or toxicity. | The OR rate was 3/25, with a CR rate of 2/25. An elderly patient with primary refractory AML had HI. DLTs included methemoglobinemia, cerebellar toxicity, sensorimotor peripheral neuropathy and mucositis. | |
| NCT00077558 | Completed | Ph-I | 33 | AL, MPD | Group A: 3-AP (105 mg/m2/d, d1–5) followed by fludarabine (15–30 mg/m2/d, d1–5); Group B: 3-AP (200 mg/m2, d1) followed by fludarabine (15–30 mg/m2/d, d1–5); repeated every 21 days until PD or toxicity. | CR and PR occurred in group A (5/24, 21%), with CR occurring at the 2 highest fludarabine doses (2/12, 17%). No CR or PR occurred in group B. Response durations were short and ranged from 1.5 to 7 months. DLTs included fever, methemoglobinemia and metabolic acidosis. | |
| NCT00381550 | Completed | SGA | 37 | sAML, CML-BP, MPD | 3-AP (105 mg/m2/d) followed by fludarabine (30 mg/m2/d) on d1–5, repeated every 21 days until PD or toxicity. | The OR rate was 49% (18/37), with a CR rate of 24% (9/37). In sAML, the OR rate and CR rate were 48 and 33%, respectively. Median OS of the entire cohort was 6.9 months, with a median OS of overall responders of 10.6 months. | |
| CPX | NCT00990587 | Completed | Ph-I | 23 | AL, CML, CLL, MDS, Hodgkin’s Disease | CPX (5–80 mg/m2/d d1–5, once daily), repeated every 21 days, or CPX (80 mg/m2/d d1–5, four times daily); repeated every 21 days for multiple cycles in the absence of PD or toxicity. | No patients achieved a CR or PR, but HI was observed in 2 patients. Disease stabilization occurred in 5 additional AML patients and 1 MDS patient. DLTs were gastrointestinal toxicities and knee pain. |
| EP | NCT00903422 | Completed | RCT | 98 | MDS, sAML/MDS | EP (50-300 mg/d) or placebo until PD or toxicity. | No patients had a CR, but two (3%) patients in the EP group had PR. Median OS and PFS were longer in the EP group than in the placebo group (27.0 weeks vs 15.7 weeks, 8.1 weeks vs 6.6 weeks, respectively). HI was recorded in 23 (36%) EP patients and eight (24%) placebo patients. PD was recorded in 40 (63%) patients in the EP group and 22 (65%) patients in the placebo group. The incidence of drug-related adverse events of grade 3 or higher were similarly in the two groups. |
| NCT01890746 | Completed | RCT | 149 | AML (except M3 or M7) | IC: daunorubicin (90 mg/m2/d, 60 mg/m2/d for age > 60 years, d1–3) and Ara-C (100 mg/m2/d, d1–7); with EP (200 mg/d, 100 mg/d for east Asians) or placebo until PLT ≥200 × 109/L, or remission, or after 42 days from the start of IC. | The EP group and the placebo group achieved a similar OR rate (70% vs 73%), and so did the CR rate and PR rate. Median DOR was longer in the placebo group than in the EP group (not reached vs 22 months). Median OS was shorter in the EP group than in the placebo group (15.4 months vs 25.7 months), and more patients died in the EP group. The incidence of LVEF events and the frequency of AE were similar in both groups during IC. However, there was a trend for more serious AE, including fatal AE, in the EP group. | |
| NCT03603795 | Recruiting | RCT | 110 | AML (age > 60 years, except M3 or M7) | IC (daunorubicin 60 mg/m2/d d1–3; Ara-C 100 mg/m2/d d1–7 and Lomustine 200 mg/m2 d1), with EP (200 mg/d, 100 mg/d for east Asians) or placebo from d11 to response evaluation or PLT > 100 × 109/L (maximum to d45). | OR rate and percentage of patients with PLT > 100 × 109/L (at d45), OS and RFS (at 1 year), OS (at 2, 3 and 5 years). | |
| NCT02446145 | Unknown | RC | 238 | AML (age ≥ 65 years, except M3) | Decitabine (20 mg/m2/d d1–5, repeated every 28 days) with EP or placebo (200 mg/d from d1, 100 mg/d for east Asians, and dose modification up to 300 mg/d, 50–150 mg for east Asians). | OR, OS, RFS and treatment change-free survival (up to 4 years). |
Refer to the website: https://clinicaltrials.gov/
Fig. 3Schematic model of ferroptosis in leukemia cells. Ferroptosis occurs as a result of iron-mediated oxidative stress and lipid peroxidation-mediated cytotoxicity. It could be due to elevated intracellular iron concentration or inhibition of GPX4 activity. Dihydroartemisinin induce ferroptosis by ferritinophagy and subsequent accumulation of ROS. RSL3 inhibits GPX4 directly, while erastin, sorafenib and p53 decrease GSH production by inhibiting cysteine transport. Lipoxygenase inhibitors (such as Ferrostatin-1 and Baicalein) suppress ferroptosis through inhibiting lipid peroxidation