Overcoming NOTCH1-Driven Chemoresistance in T-Cell Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia Via Metabolic Intervention with Oxphos Inhibitor

The inferior cure rate of T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) is associated with inherent drug resistance. The activating NOTCH1 gene mutations have been reported to cause chemoresistance at the stem cell level1. Direct NOTCH1 inhibition has failed in clinical trials due to a narrow therapeu...

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Veröffentlicht in:Blood 2020-11, Vol.136 (Supplement 1), p.18-20
Hauptverfasser: Baran, Natalia, Lodi, Alessia, Dhungana, Yogesh, Sweeney, Shannon RENEE, Renu, Pandey, Herbrich, Shelley, Hoff, Fieke W, Skwarska, Anna, Kaplan, Mecit, Kuruvilla, Vinitha Mary, Cavazos, Antonio, Warmoes, Marc, Rojas-Sutterlin, Shanti, Haman, Andre, Veiga, Diogo Troggian, Furudate, Ken, Ma, Helen, Harutyunyan, Karine, Yang, Wentao, Gagea, Mihai, Du, Di, Daher, May, Garcia, Luciana Melo, Piya, Sujan, Ruvolo, Vivian, Shanmugavelandy, Sriram, Feng, Ningping, Gay, Jason P, Havranek, Ondrej, Henderson, Jared, Tomczak, Katarzyna, Kaminski, Marcin, Herranz, Daniel, Ferrando, Adolfo, Jabbour, Elias, Di Francesco, Maria E, Teachey, David T., Horton, Terzah M., Rezvani, Katayoun, Yang, Jun J., Kornblau, Steven M., Davis, Eric, Takahashi, Koichi, Andreeff, Michael, Marszalek, Joseph R, Lorenzi, Philip, Yu, Jiyang, Tiziani, Stefano, Hoang, Trang, Konopleva, Marina
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The inferior cure rate of T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) is associated with inherent drug resistance. The activating NOTCH1 gene mutations have been reported to cause chemoresistance at the stem cell level1. Direct NOTCH1 inhibition has failed in clinical trials due to a narrow therapeutic window but targeting key oncogenic and metabolic pathways downstream of mutated NOTCH1 may offer novel approaches. We previously reported that rapid transformation of thymocytes at the DN3 differentiation stage into preleukemic stem cells (pre-LSC) requires elevated Notch1 in addition to the presence of Scl/Lmo11. Notably, we showed that cellular metabolism of NOTCH1-mutated T-ALLs depends on Oxidative Phosphorylation (OxPhos) and that OxPhos inhibition using the complex I inhibitor IACS-010759 (OxPhos-i) is efficacious in NOTCH1-mutated T-ALL patient derived xenografts (PDXs)2. Here, we investigated the link between NOTCH1-mutated chemoresistance and OxPhos in pre-leukemic and leukemic cells, utilizing comprehensive molecular and functional assays. We hypothesized that chemotherapy aided by OxPhos-i overcomes chemoresistance, depletes LSCs and combats T-ALL. First, we analyzed the role of OxPhos in downstream Notch1 targets at the pre- and leukemic stage considering four stages of thymocyte differentiation (D1-D4), in a mouse model of human T-ALL1. Gene set enrichment analysis (GSEA) implicated increased expression of Notch1 target genes starting at DN1, and OxPhos target genes were the highest-ranked gene set at DN3. Next, activation of Notch1 by its ligand DL4 and inhibition of OxPhos reduced viability of pre-LSCs, indicating that ligand-dependent activation of Notch1 signaling upregulates the OxPhos pathway and sensitizes pre-LSCs to OxPhos-i. To clarify the role of Notch1 signaling, we examined the effect of IACS-010759 on pre-leukemic thymocytes harboring LMO1, SCL-LMO1, NOTCH1, LMO1-NOTCH1 and SCL-LMO1-NOTCH1 with and without DL4 stimulation. We found that in the absence of DL4, only thymocytes harboring the Notch1 oncogene responded to OxPhos-i, whereas all DL4-stimulated thymocytes responded regardless of Notch1 status (Fig. 1a). In addition, at the leukemic stage, we found elevation of the OxPhos pathway driven by oncogenic Notch1 when we compared transcriptomes of SCL-LMO1 induced T-ALL in the presence or absence of the NOTCH1 oncogene. In line with the murine T-ALL NOTCH1 model, we performed transcriptome analysis of two independent T-ALL patient
ISSN:0006-4971
1528-0020
DOI:10.1182/blood-2020-136801