Abstract

Intensive chemotherapy for acute leukemia can usually induce complete remission, but fails in many patients to eradicate the leukemia stem cells responsible for relapse. There is accumulating evidence that these relapse-inducing cells are maintained and protected by signals provided by the microenvironment. Thus, inhibition of niche signals is a proposed strategy to target leukemia stem cells but this requires knowledge of the critical signals and may be subject to compensatory mechanisms. Signals from the niche require receptor-mediated endocytosis, a generic process dependent on the Dynamin family of large GTPases. Here, we show that Dynole 34-2, a potent inhibitor of Dynamin GTPase activity, can block transduction of key signalling pathways and overcome chemoresistance of leukemia stem cells. Our results provide a significant conceptual advance in therapeutic strategies for acute leukemia that may be applicable to other malignancies in which signals from the niche are involved in disease progression and chemoresistance.

Highlights

  • Intensive chemotherapy for acute leukemia can usually induce complete remission, but fails in many patients to eradicate the leukemia stem cells responsible for relapse

  • Using dominant-negative forms of Dynamin or small molecule inhibitors, studies showed that Dynamin-dependent endocytosis (DDE) is essential for signal transduction downstream of ligand-bound receptors activated by cues from the microenvironment[28]

  • Given the important role of Dynamin for signal transduction, we investigated the effects of small molecule inhibitors of Dynamin on a factor-dependent Ba/F3 cell line expressing the receptor for IL-7 (Ba/F3-IL7R)[12]

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Summary

Introduction

Intensive chemotherapy for acute leukemia can usually induce complete remission, but fails in many patients to eradicate the leukemia stem cells responsible for relapse. Similar to pre-LSCs, Dynole [] blocked downstream signalling activation by IL-7 and Notch[1] in DN3a cells derived from T-ALL samples (Fig. 5c).

Results
Conclusion

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