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  3. Development of resistance to type II JAK2 inhibitors in MPN depends on AXL kinase and is targetable.
 

Development of resistance to type II JAK2 inhibitors in MPN depends on AXL kinase and is targetable.

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BORIS DOI
10.48350/189292
Publisher DOI
10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-23-0163
PubMed ID
37992313
Description
PURPOSE

Myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPN) dysregulate JAK2 signaling. Since clinical JAK2 inhibitors have limited disease-modifying effects, type II JAK2 inhibitors such as CHZ868 stabilizing inactive JAK2 and reducing MPN clones, gain interest. We studied whether MPN cells escape from type ll inhibition.

METHODS

MPN cells were continuously exposed to CHZ868. We used phosphoproteomic analyses and ATAC-/RNA-sequencing to characterize acquired resistance to type II JAK2 inhibition, and targeted candidate mediators in MPN cells and mice.

RESULTS

MPN cells showed increased IC50 and reduced apoptosis upon CHZ868 reflecting acquired resistance to JAK2 inhibition. Among >2500 differential phospho-sites, MAPK pathway activation was most prominent, while JAK2-STAT3/5 remained suppressed. Altered histone occupancy promoting AP-1/GATA binding motif exposure associated with upregulated AXL kinase and enriched RAS target gene profiles. AXL knockdown resensitized MPN cells and combined JAK2/AXL inhibition using bemcentinib or gilteritinib reduced IC50 to levels of sensitive cells. While resistant cells induced tumor growth in NSG mice despite JAK2 inhibition, JAK2/AXL inhibition largely prevented tumor progression. Since inhibitors of MAPK pathway kinases such as MEK are clinically used in other malignancies, we evaluated JAK2/MAPK inhibition with trametinib to interfere with AXL-MAPK-induced resistance. Tumor growth was halted similarly to JAK2/AXL inhibition and in a systemic cell line-derived mouse model, marrow infiltration was decreased supporting dependency on AXL-MAPK.

CONCLUSIONS

We report on a novel mechanism of AXL-MAPK-driven escape from type II JAK2 inhibition, which is targetable at different nodes. This highlights AXL as mediator of acquired resistance warranting inhibition to enhance sustainability of JAK2 inhibition in MPN.
Date of Publication
2024-02-01
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
600 - Technology::610 - Medicine & health
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Codilupi, Tamara
Szybinski, Jakub
Arunasalam, Stefanie
Universitätsklinik für Hämatologie und Hämatologisches Zentrallabor
Jungius, Sarah
Department for BioMedical Research (DBMR)
Dunbar, Andrew C
Stivala, Simona
Brkic, Sime
Albrecht, Camille
Universitätsklinik für Hämatologie und Hämatologisches Zentrallabor
Department for BioMedical Research (DBMR)
Vokalova, Lenka
Yang, Julie L
Buczak, Katarzyna
Ghosh, Nilabh
Passweg, Jakob R
Rovó, Alicia
Universitätsklinik für Hämatologie und Hämatologisches Zentrallabor
Angelillo, Anne
Universitätsklinik für Hämatologie und Hämatologisches Zentrallabor
Department for BioMedical Research, Forschungsgruppe Hämatologie (Erwachsene)
Pankov, Dmitry
Dirnhofer, Stephan
Levine, Ross L
Koche, Richard
Meyer, Sara Christina
Universitätsklinik für Hämatologie und Hämatologisches Zentrallabor
Department for BioMedical Research (DBMR)
Additional Credits
Universitätsklinik für Hämatologie und Hämatologisches Zentrallabor
Department for BioMedical Research (DBMR)
Series
Clinical cancer research
Publisher
American Association for Cancer Research
ISSN
1078-0432
Access(Rights)
open.access
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