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AKR1C enzymes sustain therapy resistance in paediatric T-ALL

Authors :
Valentina Agnusdei
Maddalena Paganin
Giuseppe Basso
Luca Persano
Daniele Boso
Giampietro Viola
Roberta Bortolozzi
Francesca Maule
Silvia Bresolin
Elena Rampazzo
Giovanni Cazzaniga
Geertruy te Kronnie
Elena Mariotto
Sonia Minuzzo
Source :
British Journal of Cancer
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP, 2018.

Abstract

Background Despite chemotherapy intensification, a subgroup of high-risk paediatric T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) patients still experience treatment failure. In this context, we hypothesised that therapy resistance in T-ALL might involve aldo-keto reductase 1C (AKR1C) enzymes as previously reported for solid tumors. Methods Expression of NRF2-AKR1C signaling components has been analysed in paediatric T-ALL samples endowed with different treatment outcomes as well as in patient-derived xenografts of T-ALL. The effects of AKR1C enzyme modulation has been investigated in T-ALL cell lines and primary cultures by combining AKR1C inhibition, overexpression, and gene silencing approaches. Results We show that T-ALL cells overexpress AKR1C1-3 enzymes in therapy-resistant patients. We report that AKR1C1-3 enzymes play a role in the response to vincristine (VCR) treatment, also ex vivo in patient-derived xenografts. Moreover, we demonstrate that the modulation of AKR1C1-3 levels is sufficient to sensitise T-ALL cells to VCR. Finally, we show that T-ALL chemotherapeutics induce overactivation of AKR1C enzymes independent of therapy resistance, thus establishing a potential resistance loop during T-ALL combination treatment. Conclusions Here, we demonstrate that expression and activity of AKR1C enzymes correlate with response to chemotherapeutics in T-ALL, posing AKR1C1-3 as potential targets for combination treatments during T-ALL therapy.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
British Journal of Cancer
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2a091f4e95a39fe72da876f46db8c133