학술논문

High Immunoproteasome Activity and sXBP1 in Pediatric Precursor B-ALL Predicts Sensitivity towards Proteasome Inhibitors.
Document Type
Article
Source
Cells (2073-4409). Nov2021, Vol. 10 Issue 11, p2853. 1p.
Subject
*PROTEASOME inhibitors
*MULTIPLE myeloma
*LYMPHOBLASTIC leukemia
*ACUTE leukemia
*BORTEZOMIB
*ANTIBODY-dependent cell cytotoxicity
Language
ISSN
2073-4409
Abstract
Proteasome inhibitors (PIs) are approved backbone treatments in multiple myeloma. More recently, inhibition of proteasome activity with the PI bortezomib has been clinically evaluated as a novel treatment strategy in pediatric acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). However, we lack a marker that could identify ALL patients responding to PI-based therapy. By using a set of activity-based proteasome probes in conjunction with cytotoxicity assays, we show that B-cell precursor ALL (BCP-ALL), in contrast to T-ALL, demonstrates an increased activity of immunoproteasome over constitutive proteasome, which correlates with high ex vivo sensitivity to the PIs bortezomib and ixazomib. The novel selective PI LU015i-targeting immunoproteasome β5i induces cytotoxicity in BCP-ALL containing high β5i activity, confirming immunoproteasome activity as a novel therapeutic target in BCP-ALL. At the same time, cotreatment with β2-selective proteasome inhibitors can sensitize T-ALL to currently available PIs, as well as to β5i selective PI. In addition, levels of total and spliced forms of XBP1 differ between BCP-ALL and T-ALL, and only in BCP-ALL does high-spliced XBP1 correlate with sensitivity to bortezomib. Thus, in BCP-ALL, high immunoproteasome activity may serve as a predictive marker for PI-based treatment options, potentially combined with XBP1 analyses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]