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Ribonucleotide reductase inhibitors suppress SAMHD1 ara-CTPase activity enhancing cytarabine efficacy

Authors :
Azita Rasti
Sijia Tao
Jan-Inge Henter
Cynthia B.J. Paulin
Georgios Rassidakis
Ida Hed Myrberg
Thomas Helleday
Julian Walfridsson
Sun Lee
Rui M. M. Branca
Katja Pokrovskaja Tamm
Georgios Mermelekas
Petri Mäkelä
Ulrika Warpman-Berglund
Raymond F. Schinazi
Sharda Suman
Hanna Axelsson
Nikolas Herold
Mats Heyman
Si Min Zhang
Nikolaos Tsesmetzis
Torsten Schaller
Sarah S Bunten
Sören Lehmann
Janne Lehtiö
Si'Ana A. Coggins
Thomas Lundbäck
Dan Grandér
Kumar Sanjiv
Juliane Kutzner
Elisee Wiita
Hong Qian
Sean G. Rudd
Baek Kim
Lakshmi Sandhow
Source :
Publons, EMBO Molecular Medicine, EMBO Molecular Medicine, Vol 12, Iss 3, Pp n/a-n/a (2020)

Abstract

The deoxycytidine analogue cytarabine (ara‐C) remains the backbone treatment of acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) as well as other haematological and lymphoid malignancies, but must be combined with other chemotherapeutics to achieve cure. Yet, the underlying mechanism dictating synergistic efficacy of combination chemotherapy remains largely unknown. The dNTPase SAMHD1, which regulates dNTP homoeostasis antagonistically to ribonucleotide reductase (RNR), limits ara‐C efficacy by hydrolysing the active triphosphate metabolite ara‐CTP. Here, we report that clinically used inhibitors of RNR, such as gemcitabine and hydroxyurea, overcome the SAMHD1‐mediated barrier to ara‐C efficacy in primary blasts and mouse models of AML, displaying SAMHD1‐dependent synergy with ara‐C. We present evidence that this is mediated by dNTP pool imbalances leading to allosteric reduction of SAMHD1 ara‐CTPase activity. Thus, SAMHD1 constitutes a novel biomarker for combination therapies of ara‐C and RNR inhibitors with immediate consequences for clinical practice to improve treatment of AML.<br />SAMHD1 limits the efficacy of cytarabine by detoxifying cancer cells of its active metabolite, resulting in worse survival for acute myeloid leukaemia patients. We identify clinically used drugs capable of indirectly inactivating SAMHD1, which could lead to improved outcome for these patients.

Details

ISSN :
17574676
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Publons, EMBO Molecular Medicine, EMBO Molecular Medicine, Vol 12, Iss 3, Pp n/a-n/a (2020)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f78fa8a048c9dfd73f06f9e766af0607