PLoS ONE (Jan 2021)

Dynamin inhibition causes context-dependent cell death of leukemia and lymphoma cells.

  • Christopher von Beek,
  • Linnéa Alriksson,
  • Josefine Palle,
  • Ann-Marie Gustafson,
  • Mirjana Grujic,
  • Fabio Rabelo Melo,
  • Mikael E Sellin,
  • Gunnar Pejler

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0256708
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 9
p. e0256708

Abstract

Read online

Current chemotherapy for treatment of pediatric acute leukemia, although generally successful, is still a matter of concern due to treatment resistance, relapses and life-long side effects for a subset of patients. Inhibition of dynamin, a GTPase involved in clathrin-mediated endocytosis and regulation of the cell cycle, has been proposed as a potential anti-cancer regimen, but the effects of dynamin inhibition on leukemia cells has not been extensively addressed. Here we adopted single cell and whole-population analysis by flow cytometry and live imaging, to assess the effect of dynamin inhibition (Dynasore, Dyngo-4a, MitMAB) on pediatric acute leukemia cell lines (CCRF-CEM and THP-1), human bone marrow biopsies from patients diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), as well as in a model of lymphoma (EL4)-induced tumor growth in mice. All inhibitors suppressed proliferation and induced pronounced caspase-dependent apoptotic cell death in CCRF-CEM and THP-1 cell lines. However, the inhibitors showed no effect on bone marrow biopsies, and did not prevent EL4-induced tumor formation in mice. We conclude that dynamin inhibition affects highly proliferating human leukemia cells. These findings form a basis for evaluation of the potential, and constraints, of employing dynamin inhibition in treatment strategies against leukemia and other malignancies.