Molecular Therapy: Oncolytics (Sep 2020)

A Small Molecule Inhibitor, OGP46, Is Effective against Imatinib-Resistant BCR-ABL Mutations via the BCR-ABL/JAK-STAT Pathway

  • Liuya Wei,
  • Yang Yang,
  • Pranav Gupta,
  • Aihong Wang,
  • Min Zhao,
  • Yao Zhao,
  • Mei Qu,
  • Yu Ke,
  • Ying Liu,
  • Hong-Min Liu,
  • Xin Xu,
  • Yanli Sun,
  • Zhe-Sheng Chen,
  • Zhenbo Hu

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18
pp. 137 – 148

Abstract

Read online

Chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) is caused by the Philadelphia (Ph+) chromosome carrying the BCR-ABL oncogene, a constitutively active tyrosine kinase. The discovery of imatinib represents a major success story in the treatment against CML. However, mutations in the BCR-ABL kinase domain are a major cause of resistance to imatinib, demonstrating that BCR-ABL remains a critical drug target. Here, we investigate a novel small molecule inhibitor, OGP46, for its inhibitory activity against K562, a panel of murine BaF3 cell lines stably expressing either wild-type BCR-ABL or its mutant forms, including T315I. OGP46 exhibits potent activity against imatinib-resistant BCR-ABL mutations, including T315I. OGP46 induced cell differentiation accompanied by G0/G1 cell-cycle arrest and suppressed the colony formation capacity of cells. Treatment with OGP46 significantly decreased the mRNA and protein expression of BCR-ABL in K562 and BaF3-p210-T315I cells. Mechanistically, the anti-cancer activity of OGP46 induced by cell differentiation is likely through the BCR-ABL/JAK-STAT pathway in native BCR-ABL and mutant BCR-ABL, including T315I, of CML cells. Our findings highlight that OGP46 is active against not only native BCR-ABL but also 11 clinically relevant BCR-ABL mutations, including T315I mutation, which are resistant to imatinib. Thus, OGP46 may be a novel strategy for overcoming imatinib-resistance BCR-ABL mutations, including T315I.

Keywords