| Literature DB >> 32090127 |
Thayse Pinheiro da Costa1, Marcia Cury El-Cheikh1, Katia Carneiro1.
Abstract
Histone Deacetylase- (HDAC-) dependent epigenetic mechanisms have been widely explored in the last decade in different types of malignancies in preclinical studies. This effort led to the discovery and development of a range of new HDAC inhibitors (iHDAC) with different chemical properties and selective abilities. In fact, hematological malignancies were the first ones to have new iHDACs approved for clinical use, such as Vorinostat and Romidepsin for cutaneous T cell lymphoma and panobinostat for multiple myeloma. Besides these promising already approved iHDACs, we highlight a range of studies focusing on the HDAC-dependent epigenetic control of B cell development, behavior, and/or function. Here, we highlight 21 iHDACs which have been studied in the literature in the context of B cell development and/or dysfunction mostly focused on B cell lymphomagenesis. Regardless, we have identified 55 clinical trials using 6 out of 21 iHDACs to approach their putative roles on B cell malignancies; none of them focuses on peritoneal B cell populations. Since cells belonging to this peculiar body compartment, named B1 cells, may contribute to the development of autoimmune pathologies, such as lupus, a better understanding of the HDAC-dependent epigenetic mechanisms that control its biology and behavior might shed light on iHDAC use to manage these immunological dysfunctions. In this sense, iHDACs might emerge as a promising new approach for translational studies in this field. In this review, we discuss a putative role of iHDACs in the modulation of peritoneal B cell subpopulation's balance as well as their role as therapeutic agents in the context of chronic diseases mediated by peritoneal B cells.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32090127 PMCID: PMC7031723 DOI: 10.1155/2020/1589191
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol Res ISSN: 2314-7156 Impact factor: 4.818
Main iHDACs used for preclinical and translational studies. The table provides information regarding the name of the iHDAC, the IC50, and registered trials found at clinicaltrials.gov in addition to published papers that have used iHDACs to better understand the relevance of HDAC activity in the context of B cell behavior and biology. Chemical structures were obtained from PubChem (https://pubchem.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/).
| iHDAC | IC50 | Clinical trial identifier | HDAC specificity | Chemical structure | Biologic event | Cell type | Model | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Citarinostat (ACY-241) | 2.6 nM (HDAC 6) and 46 nM (HDAC 3) | No trials registered | HDACs 1, 2, 3, and 6 |
| Inhibition of plasma cell myeloma proliferation and survival; cell cycle disruption | MM1, H929, U266 | Human | [ |
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| ACY-738 | 1.7 nM for HDAC 6 selectively | No trials registered | HDACs 1, 2, 3, and 6 |
| Pre-B cell growth inhibition in lupus disease∗ | MRL/lpr bone marrow cells | Mouse | [ |
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| BML-281 | 0.002 nM (HDAC 6), 271 nM (HDAC 1), 252 nM (HDAC 2), 0.42 nM (HDAC 3), 6851 nM (HDAC 8), 90.7 nM (HDAC 10) | No trials registered | HDAC 6 |
| Blocks B cell infiltration in acute colitis∗ | CD19+ B lymphocyte | Mouse | [ |
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| Dacinostat (LAQ824) | 32 nM | No trials registered | Pan iHDAC |
| Decreases viability in B-ALL, multiple myeloma, and B lymphoma cells | SEMK | Human | [ |
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| Givinostat (ITF2357) | BCR-ABL signaling pathway | No trials registered | Classes I, II |
| Cell proliferation inhibition and apoptosis induction in chronic myelogenous leukemia, BCR-ABL1-positive and childhood B acute lymphoblastic leukemia | K-562, SUP-B15 | Human | [ |
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| LMK-235 | 11.9 nM (HDAC 4), 4.2 nM (HDAC 5) | No trials registered | HDACs 4, 5 |
| Induces apoptosis and BCLA1 overexpression in diffuse large B cell lymphoma | OCI-Ly10, OCI-Ly3 | Human | [ |
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| Entinostat (MS-275) | 0.51 | (1) | HDACs 1, 3, 4, 6, 8, and 10 |
| Proliferation inhibition and apoptosis induction; enhancement of DNA damage response in plasma cell myeloma | U266, MM1.R, RPMI8226 | Human | [ |
| Dose-/time-dependent cell death, gene expression disruption, and CD20 upregulation in rituximab-sensitive Burkitt lymphoma (BL) and RL (germinal centre B cell) | Raji-4RH, RL-4RH, and U2932-4RH and lymphoma cells derived from patients with untreated or relapsed/refractory B cell lymphoma | Human | [ | |||||
| Decreases cell viability in B-ALL, B-lymphoma, and multiple myeloma cell lines | SEMK2, RS4;11, SEMK2, 697, Namalwa, Daudi, Ramos, MM1S-LN, OPM2, RPMI8226 | Human | [ | |||||
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| Panobinostat (LBH589) | 5 nM in a cell-freeassay | (1) | Classes I, II, and IV |
| Reduced cell number and viability; delayed division progression; decreases the number of CD138+ antibody-secreting cells | B cell B220+, CD19+, IgM+, IgD+ | Mouse | [ |
| Reduces autoantibody-producing plasma cells∗ | MRL/lpr mouse autoimmunity | Mouse | [ | |||||
| Primary germinal centre response inhibition | C57BL/6 | Mouse | [ | |||||
| Dose-dependent proliferation and tumor growth inhibition; apoptosis induction | CLBL-1 cells | Dog | [ | |||||
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| RGFP966 | 0.08 | No trials registered | HDAC 3 |
| Induces apoptosis, decreases Bcl-2 and Bcl-xL expression. | Epstein-Barr virus-related Burkitt lymphoma | Human | [ |
| E | Mouse | |||||||
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| Ricolinostat (ACY-1215) | 5 nM in a cell-free assay. Low activity against HDAC 4/5/7/9/11, sirtuin 1, and sirtuin 2 | (1) | HDAC 6 |
| CD20 expression | Peripheral mononuclear cell from CLL patients | Human | [ |
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| Romidepsin (FK228, depsipeptide) | 36 nM (HDAC 1), 47 nM (HDAC 2) in cell-free assays | (1) | HDACs 1, 2 |
| Reduced cell number and viability | B cell B220+, CD19+, IgM+, IgD+ | Mouse | [ |
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| Tacedinaline (CI994) | 0.9 | No trials registered | Class I |
| Dose-dependent proliferation inhibition | CLBL-1 cells | Dog | [ |
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| Trichostatin A (TSA) | 1.8 nM in cell-free assays | No trials registered | Pan iHDAC |
| CD20 expression | Raji cells | Human | [ |
| Dose-dependent proliferation inhibition | CLBL-1 cells | Dog | [ | |||||
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| Tubacin | 4 nM in a cell-free assay | No trials registered | HDAC 6 |
| CD20 expression | EBV-positive Burkitt lymphoma | Human | [ |
| Dose-dependent proliferation inhibition | CLBL-1 cells | Dog | [ | |||||
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| Tubastatin A | 15 nM in a cell-free assay | No trials registered | HDAC 6 |
| CD20 expression | Raji cells | Human | [ |
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| Vorinostat (SAHA, MK0683) | 10 nM in a cell-free assay | (1) | Classes I, II, and IV |
| CD20 expression | Raji cells | Human | [ |
| Reduced cell number and viability; delayed division progression; decreases the number of CD138+ antibody-secreting cells | B cell B220+, CD19+, IgM+, IgD+ | Mouse | [ | |||||
| Dose-dependent proliferation inhibition | CLBL-1 cells | Dog | [ | |||||
| Cell viability decrease, apoptosis induction | Raji, Raji-4RH, RL-4RH, RL, and patient primary tumors | Human | [ | |||||
| Enhances apoptosis mediated by kinase inhibitors that affect BCR signaling and gene expression disruption in mantle cell lymphoma | Jeko-1, Mino | Human | [ | |||||
| Induces cell death in rituximab-sensitive Burkitt lymphoma (BL) and RL (germinal centre B cell) | Lymphoma cells derived from patients with untreated or relapsed/refractory B cell lymphoma | Human | [ | |||||
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| Scriptaid | 9 | No trials registered | Pan iHDAC |
| CD20 expression | Raji cells | Human | [ |
| Dose-dependent proliferation inhibition | CLBL-1 cells | Dog | [ | |||||
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| Suberohydroxamic acid (SBHA) | 0.25 | No trials registered | HDACs 1 and 3 |
| Dose-dependent proliferation inhibition | CLBL-1 cells | Dog | [ |
| Src tyrosine kinase Gardner-Rasheed feline sarcoma viral (v-FGR) oncogene homolog (FGR) mediates SAHA resistance | BL-2, BL-41, BL-70, Blue-1, CA-46, Daudi, DG-75, DND-39, Namalwa, Raji (Burkitt lymphoma), Carnaval, Granta-452, HBL-1, HT, Kis-1, OCI-Ly1, OCI-Ly2, OCI-Ly3, OCI-Ly7, OCI-Ly10, SU-DHL-4, SU-DHL-6, TMD8, U2932, WSU-DLCL2, WSU-FSCCL (diffuse large B cell lymphoma) | Human | [ | |||||
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| Valproic acid | Selectively induces proteasomal degradation of HDAC 2 | (1) | Pan iHDAC |
| Class-switch DNA recombination (CSR) and plasma cell differentiation | C57BL/6J | Mouse | [ |
| CD20 expression | CLL cell line | Human | [ | |||||
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| WT161 | 8.35 nM (HDAC 1), 15.4 nM (HDAC 2), 0.4 nM (HADC6) | No trials registered | HDACs 1, 2, and 6 |
| Decreases cell viability in B-ALL, B lymphoma, and multiple myeloma cell lines | SEMK2, RS4;11, SEMK2, 697 | Human | [ |
Studies that have used molecular tools to explore the role of specific HDACs in B cell biology and behavior. The table summarizes published papers that have used molecular approaches and/or knockout models to better understand the relevance of a particular HDAC in the context of B cell behavior and biology.
| Target | Effect | Cell line | Model | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HDAC 1 | Myc | Suppresses tumor growth in E | HDAC 1 knockout mice | Mouse | [ |
| p21 upregulation | Cell growth inhibition and apoptosis induction | shRNA RS4;11 | Human | [ | |
| No defined molecular target | Increased cell death | shRNA RS4;11, REH, 697, and SEMK2 cells | |||
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| HDAC 2 | Myc | Suppresses tumor growth in E | HDAC 1 knockout mice | Mouse | [ |
| p21 upregulation | Cell growth inhibition and apoptosis induction | shRNA RS4;11 | Human | [ | |
| No defined molecular target | Increased cell death | shRNA RS4;11, REH, 697, and SEMK2 cells | |||
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| HDAC 3 | MHC class II gene expression | Blocks lymphoma growth | Lymphoma cell lines (OCI-Ly7, MD901, OCI-Ly18, OZ, and RIVA) | Human | [ |
| p21 and H2AX increased levels | Increased cell death | shRNA RS4;11, REH, 697, and SEMK2 cells | Human | [ | |
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| HDAC 4 | miR-155 | Upregulation decreases proliferation and clonogenic potential and increases apoptosis | E | Mouse | [ |
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| HDAC 6 | No defined molecular target | HDAC 6 is upregulated | MRL/lpr mouse autoimmunity | Mouse | [ |
| Activation of ECM signaling | Differentially expressed in human diffuse large B cell lymphoma tissues; correlated with poor prognosis | Patient sample; NuDUL-1 | Human | [ | |
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| HDAC 7 | Itgam and CD69 promoter | Pro-B to pre-B cell transition blockade; severe lymphopenia in peripheral organs | Pro-B cells | Mouse | [ |
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| HDAC 9 | No defined molecular target | HDAC 9 is upregulated | MRL/lpr mouse autoimmunity | Mouse | [ |
| BCL6 | Constitutive expression induces lymphomagenesis | E | Mouse | [ | |
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| HDAC 10 | No defined molecular target | HDAC 10 is downregulated | MRL/lpr mouse autoimmunity | Mouse | [ |
| HDAC 10 is upregulated | MRL/lpr mouse autoimmunity | Mouse | [ | ||
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| HDAC 11 | IL-10 | Allergy (rhinitis) | Patients | Human | [ |
Figure 1HDAC activity blockade disrupts the cell cycle in the peritoneal cavity. C57BL/6 male mice were injected with iHDAC (40 nM, gray bar, or 100 nM, white bar; Trichostatin A: TSA) in the peritoneal cavity, and cell cycle was analyzed upon 48 hours. The control group was injected with DMSO. Regardless of the fact that iHDAC did not impact on cell morphology ((a) control; (b) iHDAC (40 nM); (c) iHDAC (10 nM)), we detected cell cycle arrest in the G0/G1 phase. Data are represented as means ± SEM and are representative of 4 animals in each group. Red arrows show proliferative clusters.
Figure 2HDAC activity is necessary for B1 cell behavior. Peritoneal cells were harvested from C57BL/6 male mice and cultured in medium (RPMI), medium+IL-5 (RPMI+IL-5), medium+iHDAC (RPMI+iHDAC), or medium+IL-5+iHDAC (RPMI+IL-5+iHDAC). Upon 48 hours in cell-free culture (a–e) or 24 hours on a feeder layer (h–j), B220+ cells were quantified by flow cytometry and B1 cells (B220low/CD11b+) were phenotyped. The data are represented as means ± SEM and are representative of cell cultures of 3 distinct animals in each experimental condition. IL‐5 = 20 ng/mL; TSA = 40 nM.
Figure 3HDAC activity is necessary for peritoneal homeostasis and B cell function. C57BL/6 male mice were injected with iHDAC (TSA 100 nM) in the peritoneal cavity, and upon 5 days, peritoneal cells (a–c) and the mesenteric lamina (d–f) were analyzed. B1 cells were specifically increased in iHDAC-treated groups (c). The mesenteric lamina structure was disrupted, and degranulated mast cells were observed ((e, E′), red arrow). ELISA assay showed that while iHDAC-treated B cells secreted higher levels of IgM, the levels of IgA did not change under the same conditions. Degranulated mast cells were observed only in the presence of iHDAC (B′, E′). Data are represented as means ± SEM and are representative of 4 animals in each group. Proliferative cluster (red arrow (b)). ∗∗P = 0.0079.
Figure 4Schematic illustrating the impact of iHDAC on the peritoneal physiology and B1 cell behavior. Under normal conditions (control), the peritoneal cavity is composed of a diverse set of cell types including B lymphocytes (B1 and B2), monocytes, macrophages, and mast cells. The mesenteric lamina presents high cellular density (blue dots). After inhibition of HDAC activity (iHDAC), the mesenteric lamina displays a lower cell density coupled to the increasing amount of B1 cells, degranulated mast cells, and elongated macrophages. In this scenario, iHDAC might emerge as a tractable epigenetic therapy to modulate the physiology of the peritoneal cavity in addition to modulating B1 cells, mast cells, and macrophage biology and behavior.