Efficacy of novel agents against cellular models of familial platelet disorder with myeloid malignancy (FPD-MM)

Author:

Mill Christopher P.ORCID,Fiskus Warren C.ORCID,DiNardo Courtney D.ORCID,Reville PatrickORCID,Davis John A.,Birdwell Christine E.,Das Kaberi,Hou Hanxi,Takahashi KoichiORCID,Flores Lauren,Ruan Xinjia,Su Xiaoping,Loghavi SanamORCID,Khoury Joseph D.ORCID,Bhalla Kapil N.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractGermline, mono-allelic mutations in RUNX1 cause familial platelet disorder (RUNX1-FPD) that evolves into myeloid malignancy (FPD-MM): MDS or AML. FPD-MM commonly harbors co-mutations in the second RUNX1 allele and/or other epigenetic regulators. Here we utilized patient-derived (PD) FPD-MM cells and established the first FPD-MM AML cell line (GMR-AML1). GMR-AML1 cells exhibited active super-enhancers of MYB, MYC, BCL2 and CDK6, augmented expressions of c-Myc, c-Myb, EVI1 and PLK1 and surface markers of AML stem cells. In longitudinally studied bone marrow cells from a patient at FPD-MM vs RUNX1-FPD state, we confirmed increased chromatin accessibility and mRNA expressions of MYB, MECOM and BCL2 in FPD-MM cells. GMR-AML1 and PD FPD-MM cells were sensitive to homoharringtonine (HHT or omacetaxine) or mebendazole-induced lethality, associated with repression of c-Myc, EVI1, PLK1, CDK6 and MCL1. Co-treatment with MB and the PLK1 inhibitor volasertib exerted synergistic in vitro lethality in GMR-AML1 cells. In luciferase-expressing GMR-AML1 xenograft model, MB, omacetaxine or volasertib monotherapy, or co-treatment with MB and volasertib, significantly reduced AML burden and improved survival in the immune-depleted mice. These findings highlight the molecular features of FPD-MM progression and demonstrate HHT, MB and/or volasertib as effective agents against cellular models of FPD-MM.

Funder

U.S. Department of Health & Human Services | NIH | National Cancer Institute

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Oncology,Hematology

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