Abstract

All-trans retinoic acid (ATRA) has only limited single agent activity in AML without the PML-RARα fusion (non-M3 AML). In search of a sensitizing strategy to overcome this relative ATRA resistance, we investigated the potency of the HDAC class-I selective inhibitor entinostat in AML cell lines Kasumi-1 and HL-60 and primary AML blasts. Entinostat alone induced robust differentiation of both cell lines, which was enhanced by the combination with ATRA. This “priming” effect on ATRA-induced differentiation was at least equivalent to that achieved with the DNA hypomethylating agent decitabine, and could overall be recapitulated in primary AML blasts treated ex vivo. Moreover, entinostat treatment established the activating chromatin marks acH3, acH3K9, acH4 and H3K4me3 at the promoter of the RARβ2 gene, an essential mediator of retinoic acid (RA) signaling in different solid tumor models. Similarly, RARβ2 promoter hypermethylation (which in primary blasts from 90 AML/MDS patients was surprisingly infrequent) could be partially reversed by decitabine in the two cell lines. Re-induction of the epigenetically silenced RARβ2 gene was achieved only when entinostat or decitabine were given prior to ATRA treatment. Thus in this model, reactivation of RARβ2 was not necessarily required for the differentiation effect, and pharmacological RARβ2 promoter demethylation may be a bystander phenomenon rather than an essential prerequisite for the cellular effects of decitabine when combined with ATRA. In conclusion, as a “priming” agent for non-M3 AML blasts to the differentiation-inducing effects of ATRA, entinostat is at least as active as decitabine, and both act in part independently from RARβ2. Further investigation of this treatment combination in non-M3 AML patients is therefore warranted, independently of RARβ2 gene silencing by DNA methylation.

Highlights

  • The treatment of older patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) still poses a substantial therapeutic challenge

  • We investigated the efficacy of entinostat, a class I specific histone deacetylases (HDACs) inhibitor with antileukemic and differentiation-inducing activity in AML [18], to sensitize AML blasts to all-trans retinoic acid (ATRA), to a degree shown with the DNA hypomethylating agent decitabine

  • Considering the paramount therapeutic impact of all-trans retinoic acid in the cure of acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL), it is difficult to conceive that this drug may be completely inactive in AMLs not expressing the PML-RARa protein

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Summary

Introduction

The treatment of older patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) still poses a substantial therapeutic challenge. The beneficial effects of retinoid-based ‘‘differentiation therapy’’ have been clearly demonstrated in acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL): the combination of anthracycline-based chemotherapy or arsenic trioxide with all-trans retinoic acid (ATRA) resulted in almost complete cure rates of one of the previously most fatal subtypes of acute myeloid leukemia [4], [5]. A subgroup analysis of the AMLSG HD98D clinical trial showed that AML patients bearing NPM1-, but not FLT3-mutations had lower relapse incidence and better overall survival after induction chemotherapy combined with ATRA, suggesting a role for ATRA in the treatment of non-M3 AML [6]

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