BCL6 enables Ph+ acute lymphoblastic leukaemia cells to survive BCR-ABL1 kinase inhibition.

  • Cihangir Duy
  • Christian Hurtz
  • Seyedmehdi Shojaee
  • Leandro Cerchietti
  • Huimin Geng
  • Srividya Swaminathan
  • Lars Klemm
  • Soo-mi Kweon
  • Rahul Nahar
  • Melanie Balabanov
  • Eugene Park
  • Yong-mi Kim
  • Wolf-Karsten Hofmann
  • Sebastian Herzog
  • Hassan Jumaa
  • H Phillip Koeffler
  • J Jessica Yu
  • Nora Heisterkamp
  • Thomas G Graeber
  • Hong Wu
  • B Hilda Ye
  • Ari Melnick
  • Markus Müschen

Beteiligte Einrichtungen

Abstract

Tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) are widely used to treat patients with leukaemia driven by BCR-ABL1 (ref. 1) and other oncogenic tyrosine kinases. Recent efforts have focused on developing more potent TKIs that also inhibit mutant tyrosine kinases. However, even effective TKIs typically fail to eradicate leukaemia-initiating cells (LICs), which often cause recurrence of leukaemia after initially successful treatment. Here we report the discovery of a novel mechanism of drug resistance, which is based on protective feedback signalling of leukaemia cells in response to treatment with TKI. We identify BCL6 as a central component of this drug-resistance pathway and demonstrate that targeted inhibition of BCL6 leads to eradication of drug-resistant and leukaemia-initiating subclones.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
Aufsatznummer7347
ISSN0028-0836
StatusVeröffentlicht - 2011
pubmed 21593872