| Literature DB >> 35121960 |
Mari Hashimoto1, Yoriko Saito1, Ryo Nakagawa1, Ikuko Ogahara1, Shinsuke Takagi2, Sadaaki Takata3, Hanae Amitani3, Mikiko Endo3, Hitomi Yuki4, Jordan A Ramilowski5, Jessica Severin5, Ri-Ichiroh Manabe6, Takashi Watanabe7, Kokoro Ozaki6, Akiko Kaneko1, Hiroshi Kajita1, Saera Fujiki1, Kaori Sato1, Teruki Honma4, Naoyuki Uchida2, Takehiro Fukami8, Yasushi Okazaki6, Osamu Ohara7, Leonard D Shultz9, Makoto Yamada10, Shuichi Taniguchi2, Paresh Vyas11,12,13, Michiel de Hoon5, Yukihide Momozawa3, Fumihiko Ishikawa14.
Abstract
Aggressive therapy-resistant and refractory acute myeloid leukemia (AML) has an extremely poor outcome. By analyzing a large number of genetically complex and diverse, primary high-risk poor-outcome human AML samples, we identified specific pathways of therapeutic vulnerability. Through drug screens followed by extensive in vivo validation and genomic analyses, we found inhibition of cytosolic and mitochondrial anti-apoptotic proteins XIAP, BCL2 and MCL1, and a key regulator of mitosis, AURKB, as a vulnerability hub based on patient-specific genetic aberrations and transcriptional signatures. Combinatorial therapeutic inhibition of XIAP with an additional patient-specific vulnerability eliminated established AML in vivo in patient-derived xenografts (PDXs) bearing diverse genetic aberrations, with no signs of recurrence during off-treatment follow-up. By integrating genomic profiling and drug-sensitivity testing, this work provides a platform for a precision-medicine approach for treating aggressive AML with high unmet need.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 35121960 DOI: 10.1038/s43018-021-00177-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Cancer ISSN: 2662-1347