| Literature DB >> 35526025 |
Wonhyoung Seo1,2,3, Prashanta Silwal1,2, Ik-Chan Song4, Eun-Kyeong Jo5,6,7.
Abstract
Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a severe hematologic malignancy prevalent in older patients, and the identification of potential therapeutic targets for AML is problematic. Autophagy is a lysosome-dependent catabolic pathway involved in the tumorigenesis and/or treatment of various cancers. Mounting evidence has suggested that autophagy plays a critical role in the initiation and progression of AML and anticancer responses. In this review, we describe recent updates on the multifaceted functions of autophagy linking to genetic alterations of AML. We also summarize the latest evidence for autophagy-related genes as potential prognostic predictors and drivers of AML tumorigenesis. We then discuss the crosstalk between autophagy and tumor cell metabolism into the impact on both AML progression and anti-leukemic treatment. Moreover, a series of autophagy regulators, i.e., the inhibitors and activators, are described as potential therapeutics for AML. Finally, we describe the translation of autophagy-modulating therapeutics into clinical practice. Autophagy in AML is a double-edged sword, necessitating a deeper understanding of how autophagy influences dual functions in AML tumorigenesis and anti-leukemic responses.Entities:
Keywords: Acute myeloid leukemia; Apoptosis; Autophagy; Therapeutics
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35526025 PMCID: PMC9077970 DOI: 10.1186/s13045-022-01262-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hematol Oncol ISSN: 1756-8722 Impact factor: 23.168
Fig. 1AML tumorigenesis-induced fusion gene linking autophagy. ATRA increases ALFY protein-mediated autophagic degradation of the PML/RARA protein. ATRA inhibits the mTOR1 signaling pathway and then induces p62-mediated autophagic degradation of PML/RARA. The long non-coding RNA HOTAIRM1 acts as a sponge for the microRNAs, miR-20a/106b and miR-125b, targeting the genes ULK1, E2F1, and DRAM2, which are required for PML/RARA autophagic degradation. In AML with MLL/AF9 translocation, ATG5 protein-dependent autophagy aggravates the disease status. Another fusion protein, AML1-ETO, functions as an oncoprotein through ULK1-mediated autophagy; the enzyme caspase-3 destroys ULK1, inhibiting the autophagy process and tumorigenesis of AML1-ETO
Fig. 2Oncogenic mutations linking autophagy to the tumorigenesis and anticancer effects in AML. The FLT-ITD3 mutation in AML cells increases ATF4 protein-mediated basal autophagy to promote tumorigenesis. Overexpression of the enzyme sirtuin 1 is frequently observed in AML patients with FLT3-ITD mutation, although the role of sirtuin 1 in AML autophagy is unclear. A RET protein in FLT3-dependent AML inhibits autophagy via mTORC1 pathways, while the RET inhibitor suppresses leukemic cell proliferation by autophagic degradation of mutant FLT3. Also, a FLT3-ITD inhibitor induces expression of the lipid ceramide to execute lethal mitophagy. Inactivation of WWP1 induces autophagy to impair tumor growth. Inhibition of c-KITN822K blocks constitutive activation of c-KIT and induces both apoptosis and autophagy. The transcription factor TFEB induces AML differentiation and apoptosis through the IDH1/2–TET2 axis in Myc protein-deficient conditions. The mutant NPM1 gene activates leukemogenic autophagy through PML/AKT signaling, ULK1 protein stabilization, and PKM2 enzyme-mediated phosphorylation of the Beclin-1 protein. The KIT mutation in AML constitutively activates the STAT3 signaling pathway, enhancing basal autophagy to promote AML cell proliferation. The U2AF1 mutation increases autophagy flux through the Foxo3a transcription factor. AML cells with the TP53wild type gene can survive through ATG5/7 protein-mediated autophagy. The Hsp70 inhibitor, 17-AAG, under a condition of metabolic stress, induces degradation of TP53 in AML through chaperone-mediated autophagy
Fig. 3Epigenetic regulation of ATGs in AML. Various miRNAs, including miR-17-5p, miR-23-5p, miR-20-5p, miR-15-5p, and miR-485-5p, are related to AML tumorigenesis or chemoresistance by modulating autophagy via the regulation of various targets. Ara-C-induced differentiation antagonizing non-protein coding RNA (DANCR) promotes protective autophagy via the targeting of miR-874-3p to further induce ATG16L1 protein expression. LINC00265 acts as an endogenous competitive RNA for miR-485-5p, enhancing expression of IRF2 and attenuating apoptosis through autophagy activation. By contrast, miR-143 suppresses the ATG7 and ATG2B genes, thereby increasing the cytotoxicity of Ara-C. Aberrantly expressed SNHG5 gene in AML downregulates miR-32 and increases the DNAJB9 protein, the target of miR-32, acquiring chemoresistance through autophagy regulation. Autophagy-related long non-coding RNAs (MIR133A1HG, AL359715.1, AL356752.1, and MIRLET7BHG) are associated with poor prognosis in AML patients
Fig. 4Autophagy crosstalks with tumor metabolism in AML pathogenesis. Distorted autophagy in the heterozygous loss of Atg5 protein in AML alters cell metabolism to aerobic glycolysis and enhances its aggressiveness. Decreased glycolysis and accumulation of lactate by syrosingopine (MCT4 inhibitor) inhibits cell proliferation through autophagic cell death. Glutamine depletion through L-asparaginase inhibits the mTOR pathway, strongly activating autophagy and apoptosis. AML with overexpressed FASN gene enhances mTOR signaling to sequester the transcription factor TFEB in the cytoplasm, thus blocking activities of leukemic cell differentiation. Lipid metabolism through autophagy is crucial to maintain the OXPHOS function in AML. When lipophagy is blocked, lipid droplets accumulate in AML cells, which suppress mitochondrial OXPHOS and cause cell death
Small molecules and/or agents for activation of autophagy in the context of AML treatment
| Agents | Known for | Mechanism | Outcome/effects | Study model | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vitamin D | Inhibition of miR-17-5p and induction of Beclin-1, | Inhibition of cell proliferation | HL-60, AML patients sample | [ | |
| Dendrogenin A | A mammalian cholesterol metabolite | LXRβ-dependent sensitization of AML cells to Ara-C in vitro and in vivo | Potentiation of Ara-C cytotoxicity | HL-60, KG1, MV4-11, AML patients samples, AML xenograft in mice | [ |
| Inhibition of phosphorylation of Akt and JNK to maximize the idarubicin induced DNA damage and lethal autophagy | Potentiation of Idarubicin-induced cell death | KG1α, KG1, MOLM14, OCI-AML3, AML patients samples, xenograft in mice | [ | ||
| LXRβ-, Nur77-, and NOR1-dependent induction of lethal autophagy | Anti-leukemic effect | KG1, HL-60, AML patients samples, AML xenograft in mice | [ | ||
| Dihydroartemisinin | Anti-malarial drug | Inhibition of mTOR/p70S6k signaling and activation of AMPK leading to autophagy dependent ferroptosis | Induction of ferroptosis, inhibition of cell/xenograft growth | HL-60, KG1, THP-1, AML xenograft in mice | [ |
| AC-73 | Specific inhibitor of CD147 | Inhibition of ERK/STAT3 signaling and potentiation of ATO-induced autophagy | Inhibition of cell proliferation | U937, NB4, HL-60, MV4-11, AML patients samples | [ |
LXRβ oxysterols receptor LXR-beta, Ara-C cytarabine, JNK c-Jun N-terminal kinase, Nur77 transcription factors NR4A1, NOR1 transcription factors NR4A3, CD147 cluster of differentiation 147, ATO arsenic trioxide
Small molecules and/or agents for inhibition of autophagy in the context of AML treatment
| Agents | Known for | Mechanism | Outcome/effects | Study model | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bafilomycin A1 | Inhibitor of vacuolar H+-ATPase | Inhibition of autophagy accumulates the damaged mitochondria | Effective cytotoxicity in hypoxic condition | HL-60, MOLM-13, AML patients samples | [ |
| Hydroxy-chloroquine | Anti-malarial drug | Inhibition of autophagy activates caspase 9 in Ara-C-resistant AML cells | Inducing intrinsic mitochondria apoptosis | U937, OCI-AMLM-2, AML patients samples | [ |
| Inhibition of autophagy converted CD34( +)/ROSlow AML cells to CD34( +)/ROShigh AML cells | Increasing ROS production and inducing apoptosis | HL-60, K562, THP1, OCIM3, MOLM13, NB4, AML patients samples | [ | ||
| SAR405 | VPS34 inhibitor | SAR405 inhibits the autophagy process in | Inhibition of proliferation and Inducing apoptosis | MV4-11, MOLM-14, OCI-AML3, AML patients samples | [ |
| Impairment of proliferation | MV4-11, MOLM-14, OCI-AML3, AML patients samples | [ | |||
| THZ-P1-2 | PI5P4K inhibitor | Lysosomal–autophagosomal defect and increased TFEB activation (mechanism studied in HeLa cells) | Anti-proliferative | THP1, OCI/AML-2, SKM1 | [ |
| VPS34-IN1 | VPS34 inhibitor | Reduction of intracellular vesicle trafficking, inhibition of basal and L-asparaginase-induced autophagy, modulation of mTORC1 and FLT3-ITD signaling | Mitochondrial apoptotic cell death/Anti-leukemic | HL-60, MOLM-14, several AML cell lines | [ |
| XRK3F2 | Inhibitor of ZZ domain of p62 | Inhibition the binding of p62 with defective mitochondria to block mitophagy | Inhibition of leukemia-initiating potential of leukemia cells | K562, HL-60, patient-derived tumor xenograft model | [ |
| Chidamide | HDAC inhibitor | Inhibition of SIRT1 expression to inhibit the Ara-C or sorafenib-induced autophagy | Enhancement of cytotoxicity of chemotherapy drugs | THP-1, MV4-11 | [ |
| TAK-165 | HER2 inhibitor | HER2-independet inhibition of autophagy, but induction of chaperone-mediated autophagy (CMA) during TAK-165/AC220 combinatorial treatment | Enhanced efficacy of AC220 to induce cancer cell death | HEL, ES-2, OCI-AML3 | [ |
Ara-C cytarabine, CD34 cluster of differentiation 34, ROS reactive oxygen species, VPS34 vacuolar protein sorting 34, FLT3-ITD fms-like tyrosine kinase 3-Internal tandem duplications, PI4P4K phosphatidylinositol 5-phosphate 4-kinases, TFEB transcriptional factor EB, HDAC histone deacetylases, HER2 human epidermal growth factor receptor 2, AC220 FLT3 receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitor
Dual regulators of autophagy and apoptosis in AML treatment
| Agent | Known for | Mechanism | Outcome/Effects | Study model | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4-Amino-2-trifluoromethyl-phenyl retinate | ATRA derivative | Nrf2-mediated regulation of iron homeostasis to induce the autophagy dependent ferroptosis | Ferroptosis and promoting differentiation | HL-60, NB4, U937, AML xenograft in mice | [ |
| SEP | Polysachharide | NF-κB-activated autophagy leading to apoptosis | Inhibition of leukemia progression | HL-60, L1210, murine AML allograft | [ |
| Metformin | Anti-diabetic drug | Inhibition of mTOR signaling during metformin and sorafenib combined treatment | Synergistic inhibition of cell proliferation by metformin and sorafenib | MV4-11, primary FLT3-ITD mutated leukemia cells | [ |
| Sertraline | Antidepressant drug | Induction of autophagy to facilitate apoptosis | Anti-proliferative effect and apoptosis | NB4, NB4-R1, NB4-R2, AML patients samples | [ |
| Decitabine | DNA methyltransferase inhibitor | Downregulation of TIGAR to induce ROS-associated apoptosis, induction of autophagosomes and secondary lysosome formation | Autophagy and apoptosis | HL-60, KG1, MV4-11, AML patients samples, AML xenograft in mice | [ |
| AZD8055 | mTOR inhibitor | Inhibition of mTORC1 and mTORC2 signaling: inhibition of phosphorylation of eIF4E-binding protein and PI3K/Akt feedback activation | Autophagy and apoptosis | AML patients samples, MV4-11, AML xenograft in mice | [ |
| Bortezomib | Proteasome inhibitor | Induction of ER stress, selective degradation of TRAF6 protein | Suppression of MDS/AML cell survival | TF-1, THP-1, HL-60, MDS-L, MDS/AML patients samples | [ |
| Autophagic degradation of FLT3-ITD protein through inhibition of MARK, PI3K/AKT, and STAT5 pathways | Activating lethal autophagy and apoptosis | OCI-AML3, MOLM-14, AML xenograft in mice | [ | ||
| Activation of autophagy prior to apoptosis | Autophagy and apoptosis | NB4, HL-60 | [ | ||
| Chlorprothixene | Dopamine receptor antagonist | Induction of auto-lysosome fusion and autophagolysosome formation, reduction of oncofusion protein PML-RARα and AML1-ETO | Apoptotic cell death and inhibition of AML tumor growth | NB3, Kasumi-1, K562, U937, AML xenograft in mice | [ |
| Tanshinone IIA | Lipophilic active constituent from the root of | Inhibition of PI3K/Akt/mTOR pathway | Autophagy and apoptosis | U937, AML xenograft in mice | [ |
| Acetylshikonin | Natural naphthoquinone derivative of | Activation of LKB1/AMPK pathways and inhibition of PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathways | Promoting autophagy-dependent apoptosis | HL-60, K562, THP-1 | [ |
| ANHA | Antihistamine | Increased ROS and reduced MMP, mitochondrial damage, and lysosomal disruption | Anti-leukemic in vitro, ex vivo, and in vivo | AML patients samples, several AML cell lines, AML xenograft in mice | [ |
ATRA all-trans retinoic acid, SEP Strongylocentrotus nudus egg polysaccharide, Nrf2 nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2, mTOR mammalian target of rapamycin, TIGER TP53-induced glycolysis and apoptosis regulator, eIF4E eukaryotic initiation factor 4E, ER endoplasmic reticulum, TRAF6 TNF receptor-associated factor 6, MDS myelodysplastic syndrome, ROS reactive oxygen species, PML-RARα promyelocytic leukemia/retinoic acid receptor alpha, LKB1 phospho-liver kinase B1, ANHA antihistamines
Autophagy-modulating agents used in AML clinical trials
| Drug | Target mechanism | enrolled patients | Combination therapy | Phase (status) | Clinical outcomes (N) | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sirolimus | mTOR inhibitor (autophagy induction) | High-risk AML | Mitoxantrone, etoposide, and cytarabine (MEC) | Phase I&II (complete) | ORR: 47% ORR with baseline target inhibition: 71% ORR without target inhibition: 20% | NCT00780104 NCT01184898 [ |
| RAD001 (everolimus) | mTOR inhibitor (autophagy induction) | First relapse AML (under 65 years) | 7 + 3 (cytarabine + daunorubicin) | Phase Ib (complete) | CR: 68% (19/28) FLT3-ITD mutated patient achieved CR (3/4) | NCT01074086[ |
| Elderly AML | Low-dose Ara-C | Phase Ib (complete) | ORR: 25% (6/24) PR: 4.2% (1/24) | NCT00636922 [ | ||
| Vitamin D | Autophagy induction | Elderly AML after treatment failure | Deferasirox | Retrospective case–control study | Median survival: 10.4 months vs 4 months (treated vs best supportive care) | [ |
| Bortezomib | Autophagy induction | Elderly, eligible AML/relapsed AML | Weekly idarubicin | Phase I (complete) | CR: 20% (4/20) PR: 5% (1/20) | NCT00382954[ |
| Eligible AML | 7 + 3 (cytarabine + daunorubicin) | Phase I&II (complete) | CR: 65% CRp: 4% | [ | ||
| Chidamide | Autophagy inhibition | Relapse/refractory AML | Decitabine, cytarabine, aclarubicin, and granulocyte colony-stimulating factor | Phase I/II (complete) | CR: 25.8% (24/93) CRi: 20.4% (19/93) PR: 8.6% (8/93) | NCT02886559[ |
Further details for trial with NCT numbers can be accessed at http://clinicaltrials.go
CR complete remission, CRi complete remission with incomplete hematologic recovery, CRp complete remission with incomplete platelet recovery, PR partial response, ORR overall response rate