Oncolines contributes to a proposed new combination treatment strategy for pediatric acute lymphoblastic leukemia published in Nature Communication

T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) is an aggressive cancer arising from aberrant proliferation of T cell progenitors and accounts for 15% of pediatric ALL cases. Current standard treatment, consisting of high-dose multiagent chemotherapy, has led to an overall survival rate exceeding 80%. Nevertheless, one out of five children with T-ALL will relapse within four years after the start of therapy. New treatment options are urgently needed.

With the aim to identify potential novel drug targets for relapsed T-ALL, Valentina Cordó, Ph.D. student in the group of Dr. Jules Meijerink at the Princes Máxima Center of pediatric oncology in Utrecht, the Netherlands, carried out a phosphoproteomic analysis of eleven ALL cancer cell lines [1]. In collaboration with researchers at the University of Amsterdam, Cordó and colleagues generated a comprehensive dataset of 21,000 phosphosites on 4,896 phosphoproteins, including 217 kinases. Src-family kinases, cyclin dependent kinases and insulin receptor signaling were identified as potential targetable pathways. Combination matrix experiments in T-ALL patient-derived xenografts ex vivo revealed novel potential combination treatments, such as the combination of the SRC family inhibitor dasatinib and the insulin receptor inhibitor BMS-754807 (see Figure).

Figure: Dose-response curves of Src-family kinase inhibitor dasatinib and insulin receptor inhibitor BMS-754807 and combination matrix in two T-ALL patient-derived xenografts (PDX) ex vivo.

Oncolines contributed to this [1] and other work by the Princes Máxima Cancer Center [2-4] by cancer cell line profiling and SynergyFinder™ combination experiments in patient-derived T-ALL cell samples and PDX ex vivo.

References[1] Cordó et al. (2022) Phosphoproteomic profiling of T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia reveals targetable kinases and combination strategies. Nature Communications 13:1048.

[2] van der Zwet et al. (2021) MAPK-ERK is a central pathway in T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia that drives steroid resistance. Leukemia 35, 3394-405.

[3] Li et al. (2016) IL-7 receptor mutations and steroid resistance in pediatric T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia: A genome sequencing study. PLoS Medicine 13(12):e1002200.

[4] Canté-Barrett et al. (2016) MEK and PI3K-AKT inhibitors synergistically block activated IL7 receptor signaling in T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia. Leukemia 30, 1832-43.

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