Abstract

BackgroundDiffuse large B cell lymphoma (DLBCL) is the most common form of lymphoma. Although durable remissions can be achieved in more than half of these patients, DLBCL remains a significant clinical challenge, with approximately 30% of patients not being cured. BCR-associated kinases (SYK, BTK, and PI3K) inhibitors have exhibited encouraging pre-clinical and clinical effects, as reported by many researchers. Early studies demonstrated that protein kinase C-β (PKCβ) inhibitors alter phosphorylation level the Bruton’s tyrosine kinase (BTK), which leads to enhanced BTK signaling. Here, for the first time, we investigate whether the combination of PKCβ inhibitor enzastaurin and BTK inhibitor ibrutinib has synergistic anti-tumor effects in DLBCL.MethodsIn vitro cell proliferation was analyzed using Cell Titer-Glo Luminescent Cell Viability Assay. Induction of apoptosis and cell cycle arrest were measured by flow cytometry. Western Blotting analysis was used to detect the essential regulatory enzymes in related signaling pathways. RNA-seq was conducted to evaluate the whole transcriptome changes brought by co-treatment with low doses of enzastaurin and ibrutinib. The synergistic anti-tumor effects of enzastaurin and ibrutinib were also evaluated in vivo.ResultsCombination of enzastaurin and ibrutinib produced a lasting synergistic effect on the survival and proliferation of DLBCL cells, including reduction of proliferation, promoting apoptosis, inducting G1 phase arrest, preventing cell invasion and migration, and down-regulating activation of downstream signaling. More importantly, whole-transcriptome changes results showed that combination therapy worked synergistically to regulate whole-transcriptome expression compared with enzastaurin and ibrutinib alone. Co-treatment with low doses of enzastaurin and ibrutinib could effectively downregulate BCR, NF-κB, JAK and MAPK related signaling pathway. Furthermore, the mRNA expression analysis further indicated that co-treatment significantly decreased the mRNA levels of NOTCH1. The combination effect in inhibiting proliferation of DLBCL cells probably was realized through suppression of NOTCH1 expression. Finally, the anti-tumor activity of co-treatment also was demonstrated in vivo.ConclusionsCombination of enzastaurin and ibrutinib had synergistic anti-tumor effects in DLBCL, independent of molecular subtype. These results provided a sound foundation for an attractive therapeutic treatment, and the simultaneous suppression of BTK and PKCβ might be a new treatment strategy for DLBCL.

Highlights

  • Diffuse large B cell lymphoma (DLBCL) is the most common form of lymphoma

  • Enzastaurin inhibited proliferation of activated B-cell-like (ABC) and germinal center B-cell like (GCB) cell lines in a dose-dependent manner and upregulates Bruton’s tyrosine kinase (BTK) phosphorylation To determine the effect of enzastaurin on the survival of DLBCL cell lines, we cultured nine cell lines in the presence of enzastaurin (0 to 20.0 μM) for 72 h

  • We confirmed that treatment with enzastaurin effectively reduced the viability of DLBCL cells, and there was no statistical difference between ABC and GCB cells lines (p = 0.48)

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Summary

Introduction

Durable remissions can be achieved in more than half of these patients, DLBCL remains a significant clinical challenge, with approximately 30% of patients not being cured. Diffuse large B cell lymphoma (DLBCL), the most common form of lymphoma, is characterized by a heterogeneous tumor entity that can vary in morphologic, biological, immunophenotypic, and clinical presentation, as well as therapeutic outcome [1]. Durable remissions are achieved in more than half of DLBCL patients, the disease remains a major clinical challenge, with approximately 30% of patients not being cured [3]. Continuous activation of BCR in ABC-type DLBCL leads to the phosphorylation and activation of regulatory and adaptor proteins, such as spleen tyrosine kinase (SYK), Bruton’s tyrosine kinase (BTK), and protein kinase C-β (PKCβ), especially in ABC-type DLBCL [2, 6,7,8]. An increasing number of studies have focused on the therapeutic inhibition of BCR signaling, especially combination-based therapeutic regimens for treating DLBCL [6, 11]

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