| Literature DB >> 32013157 |
Hélène Losson1, Michael Schnekenburger1, Mario Dicato1, Marc Diederich2.
Abstract
Imatinib became the standard treatment for chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) about 20 years ago, which was a major breakthrough in stabilizing the pathology and improving the quality of life of patients. However, the emergence of resistance to imatinib and other tyrosine kinase inhibitors leads researchers to characterize new therapeutic targets. Several studies have highlighted the role of histone deacetylase 6 (HDAC6) in various pathologies, including cancer. This protein effectively intervenes in cellular activities by its primarily cytoplasmic localization. In this review, we will discuss the molecular characteristics of the HDAC6 protein, as well as its overexpression in CML leukemic stem cells, which make it a promising therapeutic target for the treatment of CML.Entities:
Keywords: heat shock protein 90; histone deacetylase 6 inhibitor; imatinib resistance; leukemia stem cells; personalized treatment; targeted therapy
Year: 2020 PMID: 32013157 PMCID: PMC7072136 DOI: 10.3390/cancers12020318
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1Progression of chronic myeloid leukemia. Chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) is characterized by an excessive proliferation of non-functional leukocytes (dotted lines) or blasts in the bone marrow and then in the blood. The chronic phase remains generally asymptomatic, during which 5% blasts are found in the bloodstream. After 5 to 6 years without treatment, the pathology progresses towards the accelerated phase (5% to 20% blasts) and symptoms including fatigue and loss of appetite and weight begin to appear. Without treatment, the accelerated phase progresses in 6 to 9 months to the blast phase (more than 20% blasts), causing rapid deterioration of the general condition of the patient and death after only a few months without management. Symptoms and resistance to therapy increase during the course of chronic myeloid leukemia, while the probability of survival decreases.
Figure 2Breakpoints in the Abelson (ABL)1 and breakpoint cluster region (BCR) genes result in the formation of different transcripts encoding the BCR-ABL chimeric protein: (A) Structure of the Abelson (ABL)1 and breakpoint cluster region (BCR) genes composed of 11 and 23 exons, respectively; (B) Diagram of ABL transcripts (1130 amino acids), BCR (1271 amino acids), and BCR-ABL hybrids. The hybrid mRNA eXaY is produced after cleavage occurs after exon X of BCR and before exon Y of ABL; (C) ABL protein (145 kDa) has tyrosine kinase activity and predominantly nuclear localization. It comprises a long lipid chain, myristate (Myr), conferring a capacity for self-inhibition, SH2 and SH3 domains of Src homology, allowing interactions with proline-rich regions and with phosphorylated tyrosines, respectively, a tyrosine kinase (TK) domain, and finally an actin-binding domain (ABD) binding domain to DNA and β-actin. ABL is involved in cytoskeletal dynamics (adhesion, polarity, cell migration, and cellular protrusions), proliferation and cell survival, membrane transport (endocytosis, macropinocytosis, phagocytosis, and caveolae formation) by phosphorylating receptors such as epidermal growth factor receptor, platelet-derived growth factor beta receptor and muscle specific tyrosine kinase receptor [8], and finally in autophagy [9,10]. ABL protein is involved in neurodegenerative diseases and neuroinflammation [9,10]. The BCR protein (160 kDa) has serine/threonine kinase activity and is localized in the cytoplasm [11]. BCR comprises an oligomerization domain (OLI). Mutations in this domain cause a decrease in the tyrosine kinase activity of the BCR-ABL protein and prevent the interaction of BCR and BCR-ABL proteins. It also has a domain of homology to the protein DBL [guanosine diphosphate exchange factor (GDP) in guanosine triphosphate (GTP)], a domain of pleckstrin homology (PH), a C2 domain for binding of calcium-dependent phospholipids, and finally a GTPase (GTPase activating protein) domain (GTPase hydrolysis in GDP and phosphate ion) for binding to Rac proteins.
Human BCR-ABL transcripts and proteins. The name and composition of the various human BCR-ABL hybrid transcripts identified in patients are described. The size of the corresponding proteins, their frequency of detection, and the cell lines expressing them are also indicated.
| Size of the Corresponding Protein (kDa) | Examples of CML Cell Lines | References | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hybrid mRNA Name | Composition | ||||
| e13a2 or b2a2 | 1–13 | 2–11 | 210 | MEG-01, KBM-7, KYO-1, CML-T1, KCL-22 | [ |
| e14a2 or b3a2 | 1–14 | 2–11 | 210 | K-562, KBM-5, LAMA-84, EM-3, TK-6, EM-2 | [ |
| e13a3 or b2a3 | 1–13 | 3–11 | 210 | NA | [ |
| e14a3 or b3a3 | 1–14 | 3–11 | 210 | NA | [ |
| e18a2 | 1–18 | 2–11 | 225 | AR-230 | [ |
| e19a2 | 1–19 | 2–11 | 230 | AR-230 | [ |
| e1a2 | 1 | 2–11 | 190 | SUP-B15 *, Z-33 *, SD-1 *, TOM-1 *, Z-119 * | [ |
| e6a2 | 1–6 | 2–11 | 185 | NA | [ |
$ Of the 23 exons that compose the BCR gene. £ Of the 11 exons that compose the ABL gene. * Acute lymphocytic leukemia cell lines. ABL: Abelson; BCR: breakpoint cluster region; NA: not applicable.
BCR-ABL substrates.
| Substrates | Phosphorylation site | Function | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Abi 1 and 2 | ND | Proliferation | [ |
| BAP-1 | Serine and tyrosine residues | Proliferation | [ |
| Cbl | Tyr-674 | Unknown | [ |
| CK2 | ND | Cell cycle, apoptosis, transcription, viral infection | [ |
| Crk | Tyr-221 | Migration and cellular adhesion | [ |
| CrkL | Tyr-207 | Migration and cellular adhesion | [ |
| Dok1 | Tyr-361 | Negative regulation of signaling pathways mediated by tyrosine kinase proteins | [ |
| Fes | ND | Myeloid differentiation | [ |
| GAP-associated proteins | ND | Ras activation | [ |
| GCKR | ND | SAPK activation | [ |
| Grb2 | Tyr-209 | Ras activation | [ |
| LASP1 | Tyr-171 | Interaction with the cytoskeleton, migration and cell survival | [ |
| Lyn | ND | Cell survival | [ |
| Paxillin | ND | Focal adhesion, signaling and cell migration | [ |
| PLCγ | Tyr-69/Tyr-74 | Actin rearrangement and cell migration | [ |
| PI3-K p85 | ND | Proliferation, survival and cellular motility | [ |
| PKD | Tyr-463 | Proliferation, migration and cell survival, angiogenesis, regulation of gene expression | [ |
| P27Kip1 | Tyr-88 | Cell proliferation | [ |
| p73 | ND | Activation of transcription | [ |
| Rad9 | Tyr-28 | DNA damage repair | [ |
| Rad51 | Tyr-54 | DNA damage repair | [ |
| Ras-GAP | ND | Apoptosis, proliferation and cell migration | [ |
| RNA-polymerase II | C-terminal | Transcription | [ |
| RAFT1 | ND | Cell proliferation, autophagy, cytoskeletal reorganization | [ |
| Shc | Tyr-427 | Migration, angiogenesis | [ |
| SHIP1, SHIP2 | Tyr-986 et Tyr-1135 (SHIP2) | Signal transduction, macrophage programming, phagocytosis, migration | [ |
| STAT5 | Tyr-694 | Signal transduction, transcription activation | [ |
| Syp | ND | Unknown | [ |
| Talin | ND | Signal transmission between the extracellular matrix and the cytoskeleton | [ |
| TERT | ND | Genomic integrity | [ |
| VAV p95 | ND | Hematopoietic differentiation | [ |
Abi: Abelson interactor; BAP-1: breakpoint cluster region-associated protein 1; Cbl: Casitas-B-lineage protein; CK: casein kinase; CrkL: Crk like protein; Dok: docking protein; GAP: guanosine triphosphate (GTP)ase-activating proteins; GCKR: germinal-center kinase related protein; Grb2: growth factor receptor-bound protein 2; LASP1: LIM and Src homology (SH)3 protein 1; ND: not determined; PLCγ: phospholipase C-γ; PI3-K: phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase; PKD: protein kinase D; RAFT1: rapamycin and FK506-binding protein (FKBP)-target 1; Ras-GAP: RAS GTPase activating proteins; Shc: Src homology 2 domain containing; SHIP: SH2-containing inositol polyphosphate 5-phosphatase; Syp: SH2-containing phosphotyrosine phosphatase; TERT: telomerase reverse transcriptase; Tyr: tyrosine.
Tyrosine kinase inhibitors approved by the US Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of chronic myeloid leukemia.
| Generation | Drug Name (and Others) | Pharmaceutical Company and Marketing Authorization year by FDA | Targets | Daily Dosage in Adults | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| First | Imatinib ° (Gleevec, STI571, CGP57148B) | Novartis, 2001 | BCR-ABL, c-KIT, PDGFR | 400 mg single dose | [ |
| Second | Dasatinib * (Sprycel, BMS-354825) | Bristol-Myers Squibb, 2006 | BCR-ABL, Src family, c-KIT, PDGFR | 100 mg single dose | [ |
| Nilotinib ° (Tasigna, AMN107) | Novartis, 2007 | BCR-ABL, c-KIT, PDGFR | 300 mg in two doses | [ | |
| Bosutinib * (Bosulif, SKI-606) | Pfizer, 2012 | BCR-ABL, Src family | 500 mg single dose | [ | |
| Third | Ponatinib ° (Iclusig, AP24534) | ARIAD Pharmaceuticals, 2012 | BCR-ABL, FTL3, Src family, RET | 45 mg single dose | [ |
° Type II inhibitor binding to the inactive conformation of BCR-ABL. * Type I inhibitor binding to the active and inactive conformation of BCR-ABL. BCR-ABL: breakpoint cluster region-Abelson; FTL3: Fms-like tyrosine kinase 3; PDGFR: platelet-derived growth factor receptor; RET: rearranged during transfection.
Figure 3BCR-ABL-dependent and -independent imatinib resistances. BCR-ABL-dependent (purple) and -independent (blue) resistances can be explained by BCR-ABL duplication and mutation mechanisms, co-medication, interindividual variety, decreased import proteins, increased export proteins, binding of imatinib to plasma proteins, and the presence of imatinib-insensitive leukemic stem cells (LSCs). CYP3A4: cytochrome 3A4.
Figure 4Protein structure of histone deacetylase 6 (HDAC6). The HDAC6 protein consists of 1215 amino acids. It has a nuclear localization sequence (NLS), a nuclear export sequence (NES), two functional active catalytic (SC) sites, a cytoplasmic retention signal of eight consecutive serine-glutamic acid tetradecapeptides (SE14), and a ubiquitin-binding domain (BUZ) at the C-terminal.
List of substrates specifically deacetylated by HDAC6.
| Substrates | Localization of the Substrate | Deacetylated Lysine(s) | Function of the Deacetylated Substrate | Interaction Domains of HDAC6 | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 14-3-3ζ | Cytoplasm and nucleus | 49, 120 | Regulation of protein binding Bad and AS160 | ND | [ |
| β-catenin | Cytoplasm and nucleus | 49 | Epidermal growth factor-induced nuclear localization and decreased expression of c-Myc | ND | [ |
| Cortactin * | Cytoplasm | 87, 124, 161, 189, 198, 235, 272, 309, 319 | Regulation of cell migration and actin filament binding | DD1 and DD2 | [ |
| DNAJA1 | Cytoplasm | ND | Protein folding | ND | [ |
| ERK1 | Cytoplasm and nucleus | 72 | Proliferation, mobility, and cell survival | [ | |
| Foxp3 * | Nucleus | ND | ND | ND | [ |
| HDAC9 | Cytoplasm and nucleus | ND | Modulation of cell survival and arrest of cellular movement | DD2 | [ |
| HDAC11 | Nucleus | ND | Transcriptional activation of interleukin 10 | ND | [ |
| HMGN2 | Nucleus | 2 | Increased transcription of STAT5 | ND | [ |
| HSC70 | Cytoplasm | ND | Protein folding | ND | [ |
| HSPA5 | Cytoplasm | 353 | Ubiquitination of HSPA5 mediated by GP78 | ND | [ |
| HSP90α | Cytoplasm | 294 | Degradation and elimination of misfolded proteins and regulation of glucocorticoid receptors | DD1, DD2 et BUZ | [ |
| K-RAS * | Cytoplasm | 104 | Cell proliferation | ND | [ |
| Ku70 | Cytoplasm | 539, 542 | Suppression of apoptosis | ND | [ |
| LC3B-II* | Cytoplasm | ND | Regulation of autophagy | ND | [ |
| MSH2 | Cytoplasm and nucleus | 845, 847, 871, 892 | Reduced cellular sensitivity to DNA damaging agents and reduced DNA mismatch repair activities by downregulation of MSH2 | DD1 | [ |
| MYH9 | Cytoplasm | ND | Regulation of binding to actin filaments | ND | [ |
| PrxI | Cytoplasm and nucleus | 197 | Antioxidant activity | ND | [ |
| PrxII | Cytoplasm and nucleus | 196 | Antioxidant activity | ND | [ |
| RIG-I | Cytoplasm | 858, 909 | Recognition of viral RNA | ND | [ |
| Sam68 | Nucleus | ND | Alternative splicing | ND | [ |
| Survivin | Nucleus | 129 | Anti-apoptotic function | DD2 | [ |
| Tat | Cytoplasm | 28 | Suppression of HIV transactivation | DD2 and BUZ | [ |
| α-tubulin * | Cytoplasm | 40 | Formation of immune synapses, viral infection, cell migration and chemotaxis | DD1 or DD2 | [ |
* Cortactin and LC3B-II are also deacetylated by SIRT1, K-RAS and α-tubulin are also deacetylated by SIRT2, and Foxp3 is also deacetylated by HDAC9 and SIRT1. AS160: Akt substrate of 160 kDa; Bad: Bcl-2 associated agonist of cell death; BUZ: binding-of-ubiquitin zinc; DD: deacetylase domain; DNAJA1: dnaJ homolog subfamily A member 1; ERK1: extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1; Foxp3: forkhead box P3; GP: glycoprotein; HDAC: histone deacetylase; HIV: human immunodeficiency virus; HMGN2: high mobility group nucleosomal binding domain 2; HSC: heat shock cognate; HSP (A): heat shock protein [family A (HSP70) member 5]; LC3B-II: microtubule-associated protein 1 light chain 3; MSH2: MutS protein homolog 2; MYH9: myosin heavy chain 9; ND: non determined; Prx: peroxiredoxin; RIG-I: retinoic acid-inducible gene I protein; Sam: Src-associated substrate in mitosis; STAT: signal transducer and transcriptional activator; Tat: twin-arginine translocation protein.
Figure 5The HDAC6 protein is involved in many cellular processes. HDAC6 is involved in F-actin polymerization (A), microtubule dynamics (B), anti-apoptotic activity (C), proteasome-dependent and -independent degradation (D), transcriptional activation of chaperone proteins (E), and autophagy (F). Ac: acetylated; HAT: histone acetyltransferase; HDAC: histone deacetylase; HSF: heat shock factor; HSP: heat shock protein; MTOC: microtubule organizing center; SIRT: sirtuin; VCP: valosin-containing protein/ATPase.
Post-translational modifications regulating the activity of HDAC6.
| Post-Translational Modification | Enzyme | Target Site | Consequences | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phosphorylation | GSK3β | Ser-22 | Increased deacetylation activity of α-tubulin | [ |
| ERK1 | Ser-1035 | Regulation of cellular motility | [ | |
| GRK2 | ND | Increased deacetylation activity of α-tubulin | [ | |
| Aurora | ND | Increased deacetylation activity of α-tubulin | [ | |
| PKCζ | ND | Increased deacetylation activity of α-tubulin | [ | |
| CK2 | Ser-458 | Improved formation and elimination of aggresomes | [ | |
| EGFR | Tyr-570 | Inhibition of deacetylation activity | [ | |
| Acetylation | p300 | Lys-16 | Inhibition of deacetylation activity | [ |
CK2: casein kinase 2; EGFR: epidermal growth factor receptor; ERK1: extracellular signal-regulated kinase; GRK2: G protein-coupled receptor kinase 2; GSK3: glycogen synthase kinase 3; Lys: lysine; ND: non determined; PKCζ: protein kinase C isoform ζ; Ser: serine; Thr: threonine.
Proteins that interact directly with the HDAC6 protein.
| Protein Inhibiting HDAC6 by Direct Interaction | Protein Function | Protein Region Required for Interaction with HDAC6 | HDAC6 Domain Interacting with the Protein | Cellular Impact | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CYLD | Deubiquitinase | ND | DD1/DD2 | Cell proliferation, ciliogenesis | [ |
| Dysferlin | Skeletal muscle membrane repair, myogenesis, cell adhesion, intercellular calcium signaling | Domain C2 | ND | Myogenesis | [ |
| Mdp3 | Stabilization factor of microtubules | Amino-terminal region | ND | Cell motility | [ |
| Paxillin | Focal adhesion | Region rich in proline | ND | Polarization and cell migration | [ |
| p62 | Transport of misfolded proteins | Between the ZZ domain and the TRAF6 link area | DD2 | Aggresome formation | [ |
| RanBPM | Apoptosis, proliferation and cell migration | ND | Aggresome formation | [ | |
| Tau | Stabilization factor of microtubules | Tubulin binding region | SE14 domain | Aggresome formation | [ |
| TPPP1 | Polymerization and acetylation of microtubules | ND | Regulation of microtubule acetylation and β-catenin expression | [ |
DD: deacetylase domain; Mdp3: microtubule-associated protein (MAP) 7 domain-containing protein 3; ND: non determined; RanBPM: Ran-binding protein microtubule-organizing center; tau: tubulin-associated unit; TPPP1: tubulin polymerization-promoting protein-1.
Deregulation of HDAC6 expression in different types of cancers.
| Cancer Type | Cancers | Expression of HDAC6-Comments | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Solid tumors | Bladder | Overexpressed | [ |
| Melanoma | Overexpressed | [ | |
| Lung | Overexpressed | [ | |
| Oral squamous cell carcinoma | Overexpressed-Enhanced expression in advanced stages | [ | |
| Ovarian carcinoma | Overexpressed-Enhanced expression in advanced stages | [ | |
| Breast | Overexpressed-Prediction of a good or bad prognosis | [ | |
| Hepatocytic carcinoma | Overexpressed-Enhanced expression in advanced stages | [ | |
| Under-expressed-HDAC6 suggested as a tumor suppressor | [ | ||
| Hematological | Chronic lymphocytic leukemia | Overexpressed-Observation on patient samples, cell lines and a transgenic mouse model | [ |
| Acute myeloid leukemia | Overexpressed | [ | |
| Acute lymphoblastic leukemia | Overexpressed-Enhanced expression in advanced stages | [ | |
| Chronic lymphocytic leukemia | Overexpressed-Correlated with longer survival | [ | |
| T-cell cutaneous lymphoma | Overexpressed-Correlated with longer survival | [ | |
| Chronic myeloid leukemia | Overexpressed-Increased expression in CD34+ cells | [ | |
| Multiple myeloma | Overexpressed | [ | |
| Mantle cell lymphoma | Overexpressed | [ | |
| Diffuse large B cell lymphoma | Overexpressed | [ | |
| Peripheral T-cell lymphoma | Overexpressed | [ |
CD: cluster of differentiation; HDAC6: histone deacetylase 6.
List of HDAC6 inhibitors.
| Class | HDAC6 Inhibitor | Binding Domain | CI50 (nM) of the HDAC6 Activity | Selectivity Ratio for HDAC6 Compared to (Other HDACs) | Inhibition of HDAC6 | Effect on Cancer Cell Lines or Cancer Type | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Benzamides | Trithiocarbonate derivative (12ac) | ND | 65 | 19 (HDAC1) | 10 (lung cancer) | CI50 = 8.2 µM (cervical cancer) | [ |
| NQN-1 (2-benzyl-amino-naphthoquinone) | ND | 5540 | Values non available (HDAC1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11) | 4 (chronic myeloid leukemia) | CI50 = 0.8 µM (leukemia) | [ | |
| Hydroxamates | Hydroxamic acid containing a phenylalanine (4n) | His215, His216, Tyr386, Phe283, and Tyr255 of DD1 and His610, His611, Tyr782, Phe620, and Phe680 of an HDAC6 homology model | 1690 | 14 (HDAC1) | 1 (colorectal carcinoma) | IC50: 3 to > 50 µM (various cancer cell lines) | [ |
| Hydroxamic acid containing a pyridylalanine (5a) | Phe566 of DD2 of an HDAC6 homology model | 3970 | 25 (HDAC1) | ND | IC50: 104 µM (breast cancer) | [ | |
| ACY-738 | ND | 1.7 | 55 (HDAC1), 75 (HDAC2), 128 (HDAC3) | 2.5 (neural cells) | ND | [ | |
| ACY-775 | ND | 7.5 | 283 (HDAC1), 343 (HDAC2), 1496 (HDAC3) | 2.5 (neural cells) | ND | [ | |
| ACY-1083 | His573 and His574 of DD2 | 3 | 260 (HDAC1) | 0.03 (neuroblastoma) | ND | [ | |
| Bavarostat | Ser568 of DD2 | 60 | >10000 (HDAC1, 2, 3), 188 (HDAC4), 317 (HDAC5), 78 (HDAC7), 142 (HDAC8), 87 (HDAC9), >17 (HDAC10), 167 (HDAC11) | 10 (neural progenitor cells derived from induced pluripotent stem cells) | ND | [ | |
| BRD9757 | ND | 30 | 21 (HDAC1), 60 (HDAC2), 23 (HDAC3), 727 (HDAC4), 611 (HDAC5), 420 (HDAC7), 36 (HDAC8), >1000 (HDAC9) | 10 (cervical cancer) | ND | [ | |
| Cay10603 | His499 of DD2 of an HDAC6 homology model | 0.002 | ND | <1 to 1 µM (several pancreatic cancer cell lines) | ND | [ | |
| Citarinostat (ACY-241) | ND | 2.6 | 14 (HDAC1), 17 (HDAC2), 18 (HDAC3 and 4), >7000 (HDAC4, 5,9), 2808 (HDAC7), 53 (HDAC8), | 0.3 (ovarian cancer) | CI50: 4.6 to 6.1 µM (ovarian and breast cancer) | [ | |
| α3β-cyclic tetrapeptide (23) | ND | 39 | 3 (HDAC1), 4 (HDAC3), 6 (HDAC8) | 2 (acute lymphoblastic leukemia) | IC50: 9 to > 20 µM (various cancer cell lines) | [ | |
| Compound containing a phenylisoxazole group as a surface recognition group (7) | His499 of HDAC7 | 0.002 | >100000 (HDAC1), >100000 (HDAC2), 210 (HDAC3), >3000000 (HDAC8), 45350 (HDAC10) | ND | IC50: 0.1 to 1 µM (various prostate cancer cell lines) | [ | |
| Compound containing a triazolylphenyl group (6b) | ND | 1.9 | 52 (HDAC1), 155 (HDAC2), 7 (HDAC3), 420 (HDAC8), 59 (HDAC10) | ND | IC50: <0.5 to 22 µM (several prostate cancer lines) | [ | |
| Compound containing a peptoid (2i) | Tyr301 of DD2 of an HDAC6 homology model | 1.59 | 126 (HDAC2), >6000 (HDAC4), 40 (HDAC11) | N | IC50: 0.34 to 2.7 µM (various cancer cell lines) | [ | |
| 3-aminopyrrolidinone derivative (33) | ND | 17 | 4359 (HDAC1), 11 (HDAC8) | 0.3 (multiple myeloma) | Good oral bioavailability | [ | |
| 4-aminomethylaryl acid derivative (1a) | ND | 19 | 305 (HDAC1), 842 (HDAC2), 237 (HDAC3), 790 (HDAC4), 174 (HDAC5), 242 (HDAC7), 36 (HDAC8), 195 (HDAC0) | 0.46 (cervical cancer) | ND | [ | |
| 4-hydroxybenzoic acid derivative (7b) | ND | 200 | >50000 (HDAC1, 2, 8), >500000 (HDAC3, 10, 11) | 50 (prostate cancer) | IC50: 41 to 130 (several prostate and breast cancer cell lines) | [ | |
| 4-hydroxybenzoic acid derivative (13a) | ND | 20000 | 25 (HDAC1), >5000 (HDAC2, 3, 4, 8, 10), >2500 (HDAC11) | 50 (prostate cancer) | IC50: 19 to 127 (several prostate and breast cancer cell lines) | [ | |
| Aminoteraline derivative (32) | Phe620 and Phe680 of an HDAC6 homology model | 50 | 126 (HDAC1), 2 (HDAC8) | 2 (neuroblastoma) | IC50 = 5.4 µM (neuroblastoma) | [ | |
| Benzothiophene derivative (39) | ND | 14 | ND | Same effect as tubastatin A | Does not target NF-κB and AP-1 at the transcriptional level | [ | |
| 2,4-imidazolinedione derivative (10c) | ND | 4.4 | 218 (HDAC1), 63 (HDAC2), 53 (HDAC3), > 20000 (HDAC4, 7, 8, 9, 11), 3386 (HDAC5), 37 (HDAC10) | 1.6 (acute myeloid leukemia) | IC50: 0.2 to 0.8 µM (various cancer cell lines) | [ | |
| Mercaptoacetamide derivative (2) | ND | 95.3 | 34 (HDAC1), 77 (HDAC2), 64 (HDAC8), 112 (HDAC10) | ND | At 10 µM protects cortical neurons from oxidative stress inducing death | [ | |
| N-Hydroxycarbonylbenylamino quinoline derivative (13) | ND | 0.291 | 32817 (HDAC1), 42955 (HDAC2), 26632 (HDAC3), 15250 (HDAC4), 10694 (HDAC5), 2436 (HDAC7), 4089 (HDAC8), 5258 (HDAC9), 33646 (HDAC10), 1292 (HDAC11) | 0.1 (multiple myeloma) | IC50: 9.1 to 40.6 µM (multiple myeloma) | [ | |
| Isoxazole-3-hydroxamate derivative (SS-208) | His463, Pro464, Phe583, and Leu712 of DD2 | 12 | 116 (HDAC1), 1625 (HDAC4), 576 (HDAC5), 695 (HDAC7), 103 (HDAC8), 3183 (HDAC9), 427 (HDAC11) | 5 (melanoma) | ND | [ | |
| Phenothiazine derivative (7i) | Phe620 and Phe680 of DD2 | 5 | 538 (HDAC1) | 0.1 (acute myeloid leukemia) | ND | [ | |
| Phenylhydroxamate derivative (2) | Phe464 and His614 of DD2 | 3 | 27 (HDAC1) | ND | CI50: 0.65 to 2.77 (ovarian cancer and squamous cell carcinoma of the tongue) | [ | |
| Phenylsulfonylfuroxan derivative (5c) | ND | 7.4 | 33 (HDAC1), 51 (HDAC2), 45 (HDAC3), 4 (HDAC4), 46 (HDAC8), 82 (HDAC11) | 0.013 (acute myeloid leukemia) | IC50: 0.4 to 5.8 µM (various cancer cell lines) | [ | |
| Pyridone derivative (11e) | Phe155 and Phe210 of HDAC2 | 2.46 | 8 (HDAC1), 52 (HDAC2), 127 (HDAC3), 2329 (HDAC4), 785 (HDAC5), 1512 (HDAC7), 77 (HDAC8), 2268 (HDAC9), 21 (HDAC10), 22 (HDAC11) | ND | IC50: 0.14 to 0.38 µM (various cancer cell lines) | [ | |
| Pyrimidinedione derivative (6) | ND | 12.4 | 138 (HDAC1), 444 (HDAC2) | ND | Induces arrest of the cell cycle in subG1 phase and death by apoptosis (colon cancer) | [ | |
| Quinazolin-4-one derivative (3f) | ND | 29 | 65 (HDAC1), 222 (HDAC2), 60 (HDAC18), 141 (HDAC11) | Increases acetylation levels of α-tubulin and histone H3 at 10 μM | ND | [ | |
| Sulfone derivative (36) | ND | 8 | 138 (HDAC8), 300 (HDAC11) | 0.01 (unspecified) | ND | [ | |
| Trichostatine A derivatives (M344, 16b) | ND | 88 | 3 (HDAC1) | ND | ND | [ | |
| Tubacin derivative (WT-161) | Phe200, Phe201, Leu270, Arg194 of HDAC7 | 0.4 | 129 (HDAC3) | 0.3 (multiple myeloma) | IC50 = 3.6 µM (multiple myeloma)SangtingTaoCI50: 1.5 to 4.7 µM (multiple myeloma cell lines) | [ | |
| Tubastatin A derivative (Marbostat-100) | Asp649, His651 et Asp742 of DD2 | 0.7 | 1106 (HDAC2), 247 (HDAC8) | 0.05 (acute monocytic leukemia) | Non-cytotoxic | [ | |
| Indolylsulfonylcinnamic hydroxamate (12) | ND | 5.2 | 60 (HDAC1), 223 (HDAC2) | 0.1 (colon cancer) | IC50: 0.4 to 2.5 µM (multiple cancer cell lines) | [ | |
| MAIP-032 | DD2 | 58 | 38 (HDAC1) | ND | CI50: 3.87 µM (squamous cell carcinoma line of the tongue) | [ | |
| MPT0G211 | ND | 0.291 | ND | 0.1 (neuroblastoma) | ND | [ | |
| N-hydroxy-4-[(N(2-hydroxyethyl)-2-phenylacetamido)methyl)-benzamide)] (HPB) | His573 and His574 of DD2 | 31 | 37 (HDAC1) | 8 (prostate cancer) | ND | [ | |
| N-hydroxy-4-(2-[(2-hydroxyethyl)(phenyl)amino]-2-oxoethyl)benzamide (HPOB) | Binding to zinc ion only via its OH group but does not displace the zinc-bound water molecule | 56 | 52 (HDAC1) | 16 (prostate cancer, adenocarcinoma, glioblastoma) | Increases the effect on cell viability in combination with etoposide, dexamethasone or SAHA | [ | |
| N-hydroxy-4-(2-methoxy-5-(methyl(2-methylquinazolin-4-yl)-amino)phenoxy)butanamide (23bb) | Tyr298 and Glu255 of an HDAC6 homology model | 17 | 25 (HDAC1), 200 (HDAC8) | 0.051 (cervical cancer) | IC50: 14 to 104 nM (various cancer cell lines) | [ | |
| Nexturastat A | DD2 of an HDAC6 homology model | 5 | 604 (HDAC1) | 0.01 (murine melanoma) | IC50 = 14.3 µM (melanoma) | [ | |
| Oxazole hydroxamate (4g) | Phe620, Phe680, Leu749, and Tyr782 of DD2 of an HDAC6 homology model | 59 | 237 (HDAC1, 8) | 10 (cervical cancer) | IC50 = 10.2 µM (acute myeloid leukemia) | [ | |
| Ricolinostat (ACY-1215) | DD2 of an HDAC6 homology model | 4.7 | 12 (HDAC1), 10 (HDAC2), 11 (HDAC3), 1490 (HDAC4), 1064 (HDAC5), 298 (HDAC7), 21 (HDAC8), >2000 (HDAC9, 11) | 0.62 (multiple myeloma) | CI50: 2 to 8 µM (multiple myeloma cell lines) | [ | |
| Sahaquine | ND | ND | ND | 0.1 (glioblastoma) | CI50: 10 µM (glioblastoma) | [ | |
| TC24 | Ser568, His610, Phe679 and Tyr782 of HDAC6 | ND | ND | 1 et 10 (gastric cancer) | CI50: 10.2 to 17.2 µM (several gastric cancer cell lines) | [ | |
| Tetrahydroisoquinoline (5a) | ND | 36 | 1250 (HDAC1), >1000 (HDAC2, 4, 5, 7, 10, 11), 1278 (HDAC3), 58 (HDAC8) | 0.21 (cervical cancer) | ND | [ | |
| Thiazole | ND | 52 | ND | ND | ND | [ | |
| Tubacin | DD2 of an HDAC6 homology model | 4 | 350 (HDAC1) | 5 (prostate cancer)SangtingTao2.5 (acute lymphoblastic leukemia) | IC50: 1.2 to 2 µM (acute lymphoblastic leukemia) | [ | |
| Tubastatin A | His610, His611, Phe679, Phe680 and Tyr782 of HDAC6 | 15 | 1093 (HDAC1) | 2.5 (unspecified) | ND | [ | |
| Tubathian A | ND | 1.9 | 5790 (HDAC1) | 0.1 (ovarian cancer) | ND | [ | |
| Other | 3-hydroxypyridine-2-thione (3-HPT) | Tyr306 of HDAC8 | 681 | 5 (HDAC8) | ND | Inactive against two prostate cancer cell lines and one acute T cell leukemia cell line | [ |
| 1-hydroxypyridine-2-thione (1HPT)-6-carboxylic acid | DD | 150 | 287 (HDAC1), 4733 (HDAC2), 473 (HDAC4), 233 (HDAC5), 1933 (HDAC7), 22 (HDAC8), 313 (HDAC9) | ND | CI50: 18 to 75 µM (leukemia) | [ | |
| Adamantylamino derivative (20a) | ND | 82 | 46 (HDAC1), 51 (HDAC4) | ND | ND | [ | |
| Mercaptoacetamide derivative (2b) | ND | 1.3 | 3615 (HDAC1) | 10 (primary rat cortical culture) | ND | [ | |
| Sulfamide derivative (13e) | ND | 440 | >23 (HDAC1) | 1 (bladder cancer) | ND | [ | |
| Undefined structure | CKD-506 | ND | 5 | >400 (HDAC1, 2, 7, 8) | 0.03 (Human PBMCs) | ND | [ |
Arg: arginine; Asp: aspartic acid; CI50: concentration inhibiting 50% of cell viability; DD: deacetylase domain; Glu: glutamic acid; HDAC: histone deacetylase; His: histidine; IC50: concentration inhibiting 50% of cell growth; Leu: leucine; ND: non determined; PBMC: peripheral blood mononuclear cell; Phe: phenylalanine; Pro: proline; Ser: serine; Tyr: tyrosine.
HDAC6 Inhibitors in Clinical Trials in Cancer. Clinical studies include four phases. Phase I is performed on healthy volunteers to determine the maximum tolerated dose in humans. Phase II is performed on a limited patient population to determine the optimal dosage. Phase III is performed on several thousand patients and will demonstrate the therapeutic value of the drug and assess its benefit/risk. Phase IV is performed once the drug is marketed and allows to better characterize its adverse effects.
| HDAC6 Inhibitor | Clinical Trial Identification | Phase of the Clinical Trial | Pathology |
|---|---|---|---|
| ACY-241 | NCT02400242 | Ia/Ib | Multiple myeloma |
| NCT02935790 | Ib | Stage III and IV unresectable melanoma | |
| NCT02551185 | Ib | Advanced solid tumors | |
| NCT02635061 | Ib | Non-resectable non-small cell lung cancer | |
| ACY-1215 | NCT02632071 | Ib | Unresectable or metastatic breast cancer |
| NCT02787369 | Ib | Relapsed chronic lymphocytic leukemia | |
| NCT02091063 | Ib/II | Relapsed or refractory lymphoid malignancies | |
| NCT01997840 | Ib/II | Recurrent and refractory multiple myeloma | |
| NCT01583283 | I/II | Multiple myeloma recurrent or recurrent and refractory | |
| NCT02189343 | Ib | Recurrent and refractory multiple myeloma | |
| NCT01323751 | I/II | Multiple myeloma recurrent or recurrent and refractory | |
| NCT02856568 | Ib | Unresectable or metastatic cholangiocarcinoma | |
| NCT02661815 | Ib | Ovarian cancer, primary peritoneal cancer or platinum-resistant fallopian tubes |
Figure 6Role of HDAC6 in chronic myeloid leukemia. (A) HDAC6 is implicated in proteasome-dependent protein degradation by its interaction with HSP90α, a chaperone protein which, when deacetylated by HDAC6, is involved in the stabilization of BCR-ABL. In its acetylated (Ac) form, HSP90α loses its chaperone function, which leads to ubiquitination (Ub) and subsequent degradation of BCR-ABL by the proteasome. (B) Imatinib-insensitive chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) leukemic stem cells (LSCs) overexpress HDAC6 compared to CML cells.