Abstract

<div>Abstract<p>Despite effective new therapies, adaptive resistance remains the main obstacle in acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) therapy. Autophagy induction is a key mechanism for adaptive resistance. Leukemic blasts at diagnosis express higher levels of the apical autophagy kinase <i>ULK1</i> compared with normal hematopoietic cells. Exposure to chemotherapy and targeted agents upregulate ULK1, hence we hypothesize that developing ULK1 inhibitors may present the unique opportunity for clinical translation of autophagy inhibition. Accordingly, we demonstrate that ULK1 inhibition, by genetic and pharmacologic means, suppresses treatment-induced autophagy, overcomes adaptive drug-resistance, and synergizes with chemotherapy and emerging antileukemia agents like venetoclax (ABT-199). The study next aims at exploring the underlying mechanisms. Mechanistically, ULK1 inhibition downregulates <i>MCL1</i> antiapoptotic gene, impairs mitochondrial function and downregulates components of the CD44-xCT system, resulting in impaired reactive oxygen species (ROS) mitigation, DNA damage, and apoptosis. For further validation, several mouse models of AML were generated. In these mouse models, ULK1 deficiency impaired leukemic cell homing and engraftment, delayed disease progression, and improved survival. Therefore, in the study, we validated our hypothesis and identified ULK1 as an important mediator of adaptive resistance to therapy and an ideal candidate for combination therapy in AML. Therefore, we propose ULK1 inhibition as a therapeutically relevant treatment option to overcome adaptive drug-resistance in AML.</p>Implications:<p>ULK1 drives a cell-intrinsic adaptive resistance in AML and targeting ULK1-mediated autophagy can synergize with existing and emerging AML therapies to overcome drug-resistance and induce apoptosis.</p></div>

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