Abstract
CK2 is a ubiquitously expressed, constitutively active Ser/Thr protein kinase, which is considered the most pleiotropic protein kinase in the human kinome. Such a pleiotropy explains the involvement of CK2 in many cellular events. However, its predominant roles are stimulation of cell growth and prevention of apoptosis. High levels of CK2 messenger RNA and protein are associated with CK2 pathological functions in human cancers. Over the last decade, basic and translational studies have provided evidence of CK2 as a pivotal molecule driving the growth of different blood malignancies. CK2 overexpression has been demonstrated in nearly all the types of hematological cancers, including acute and chronic leukemias, where CK2 is a key regulator of signaling networks critical for cell proliferation, survival and drug resistance. The findings that emerged from these studies suggest that CK2 could be a valuable therapeutic target in leukemias and supported the initiation of clinical trials using CK2 antagonists. In this review, we summarize the recent advances on the understanding of the signaling pathways involved in CK2 inhibition-mediated effects with a particular emphasis on the combinatorial use of CK2 inhibitors as novel therapeutic strategies for treating both acute and chronic leukemia patients.
Introduction
Phosphorylation can regulate almost every property of a protein and is involved in all fundamental cellular processes. Thus, proper regulation of phosphorylation events is critical to the homeostatic functions of cell signaling. Indeed, deregulation of signaling pathways underlies many human diseases, including cancer.1 The importance of phosphorylation makes protein kinases and phosphatases promising therapeutic targets for a wide variety of disorders.2 CK2, formerly known as casein kinase II, was discovered in 1954,3 although only recently, and especially over the last two decades, it has become one of the most studied protein kinases, due to its ubiquity, pleiotropy and constitutive activity. In particular, appreciation of its pleiotropy has completely changed our vision of CK2 biology, from an ordinary cell homeostasis-maintaining enzyme to a master kinase potentially implicated in many human physiological and pathological events. CK2 is responsible for about 25% of the phosphoproteome,4 as it catalyzes the phosphorylation of >300 substrates.5 This partly explains the CK2 interconnected roles that underlie its involvement in many signaling pathways. However, CK2 prevalent roles are promotion of cell growth and suppression of apoptosis. Accordingly, several lines of evidence support the notion that CK2 is a key player in the pathogenesis of cancer. High levels of CK2 transcript and protein expression, as well as increased kinase activity are associated with the pathological functions of CK2 in a number of neoplasias.6 It was only over the last decade, after extensive analyses in solid tumors, that basic and translational studies have provided evidence for a pivotal role of CK2 in driving the growth of different blood cancers as well, although the first report demonstrating increased CK2 expression in acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) dates back to 1985.7 Since then, CK2 overexpression/activity has been demonstrated in other hematological malignancies, including acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) and chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML).8 With the notable exceptions of CML and pediatric ALL, many patients with leukemias still have a poor outcome, despite the development of protocols with optimized chemotherapy combinations. Insufficient response to first-line therapy and unsalvageable relapses present major therapeutic challenges. Moreover, chemotherapy, even if successful, could have deleterious long-term biological and psychological effects, especially in children.9 Furthermore, CML patients can develop resistance to tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs), while both primary chemoresistant and relapsed pediatric ALL cases still remain an unresolved issue.9
Therefore, there is a need for novel, less toxic and more effective targeted therapeutic strategies for leukemic patients. The findings that emerged from studies on CK2 in leukemias have highlighted the potential for CK2 inhibitors to be an efficacious treatment for this type of malignant disorders. In this review, following a brief overview of what is known about CK2 in general and its contribution to some aspects of cancer, we will tackle the issue of CK2 inhibitors. Then, we will summarize the recent advances on the signaling pathways involved in CK2 inhibition-mediated effects in leukemias, with a particular emphasis on the combinatorial use of CK2 inhibitors as novel therapeutic strategies.
CK2 general features
CK2 is ubiquitously distributed in eukaryotes. Its activity depends on the catalytic subunit (α and/or α′) incorporated into a tetrameric structure (the typical ‘butterfly-shaped’ holoenzyme) composed of two regulatory (β) and two catalytic subunits, in a homozygous or heterozygous composition (α2β2; αα′β2; α′2β2) (Figure 1). The α subunits comprise a catalytic core consisting of two major folding domains (N- and C- terminal), which harbor the active site in between.10 The β-subunits bind the α-subunits through their C-terminal domains and, by doing so, they enhance the stability, but not the activity, of CK2. Indeed, dimerization of the β-subunits is mandatory for the holoenzyme. Moreover, the regulatory subunits interact with protein partners and determine substrate specificity.10
At variance with most protein kinases whose activity is turned on in response to specific stimuli and whose genetic alterations often underlie pathological situations, CK2 is not susceptible to a tight regulation and there are no gain-of-function mutations known to affect its activity.10 CK2α is phosphorylated in a cell-cycle-dependent manner at four amino acidic residues located in its C-terminal region. Nevertheless, these phosphorylation events do not affect CK2 catalytic activity.10 Also the β-subunit is phosphorylated at its autophosphorylation site and at Ser 209.10 Since autophosphorylation of the β-subunit controls its stability, this event could result in CK2-enhanced activity, but this hypothesis needs to be investigated in a rigorous manner. Mounting evidence suggests additional mechanisms of CK2 regulation, including polymerization, local recruitment into complexes or intracellular compartmentalization.10
Although oncogenic mutations of CK2 have never been reported, its overexpression and hyperactivation are a common denominator in the majority of cancers and are associated with an aggressive tumor cell behavior.11 Therefore, the concept of ‘cancer addiction’ has been recently applied to CK2: cells with abnormally high levels of CK2 are ‘predisposed’ to malignant transformation and treatment with CK2 inhibitors should deprive them of their refractoriness to apoptosis.12 In contrast, CK2 inhibition in healthy cells would result in deprivation of a redundant kinase, so that consequences on cell physiology would be less serious than in cancer cells that are addicted to high CK2 activity levels.
Furthermore, CK2 would create a cellular environment positive to neoplasia not in a classical hierarchical way, but rather by impinging ‘laterally’ on a number of signaling cascades crucially determining cell fate.13
CK2 regulation of cancer cell behavior
CK2 acts as a regulator of several hallmarks of cancer cell behavior.1, 14 For the scope of this review, it is especially important to focus on some signaling networks through which CK2 sustains proliferation and survival of tumor cells.
Sustaining cell proliferation and survival
CK2 upregulates the PI3K/PTEN/Akt/mTOR, JAK/STAT and Ras/MEK/ERK signaling modules. These pathways control cell proliferation and survival through multiple mechanisms.15, 16
CK2 stimulates Akt by two distinct mechanisms. On one side, CK2 phosphorylates a cluster of residues (Ser 380/Thr 382/Ser 385) at the PTEN C-terminal: this stabilizes PTEN but reduces its lipid phosphatase activity, thus preventing the dephosphorylation of phosphatidylinositol 3,4,5-trisphosphate (PIP3) and perpetuating its action as Akt activator.17 On the other side, CK2 directly phosphorylates Akt at Ser 129, which both positively contributes to Akt activity and increases Akt association with the chaperone protein HSP90, thus protecting Akt from protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) activity on Thr 308.18
As to JAK/STAT, CK2 is an interacting partner of both JAK1 and JAK2, phosphorylates JAK2 in vitro and is essential for JAK-STAT1/3/5 activation, hence it regulates expression of genes which provide survival advantage and proliferative capacity to cancer cells.19, 20, 21
Regarding the Ras/MEK/ERK module, CK2 potentiates ERK activation by direct phosphorylation at Ser 244/Ser 245/ Ser 246 residues within the nuclear localization signal, thus enhancing ERK1/2 nuclear translocation and activity.22
Another signaling pathway frequently deregulated in cancer cells and displaying both pro-proliferative and anti-apoptotic functions is the NF-κB network.23 Functional activation of NF-kB requires it to be released from its inhibitor (IκB) and translocate to the nucleus whereby it activates transcription. This occurs through the regulated degradation of IκB, a multistep process in which phosphorylation results in IκB ubiquitination and recognition by the proteasome.23 CK2 acts a multi-site regulator of the NF-κB signaling pathway. Indeed, CK2 targets not only IkB,24 but also both IKK-i/IKKɛ upstream of IkB25 and NF-κB p65 itself.26 Phosphorylation at Ser 529 of p65 enhances the NF-κB transcriptional activity by improving its DNA-binding potential.27
Moreover, in addition to the effects on pro-survival signaling pathways, CK2 can directly inhibit both the intrinsic and extrinsic apoptotic pathways, by targeting caspase signaling.28
Inactivating tumor suppressors
Besides PTEN, CK2 interacts with and phosphorylates p53 at Ser 392, which results in a partial inactivation of p53 DNA-binding and tumor suppressor functions.29 Also PML levels are controlled by CK2 phosphorylation, which promotes its degradation by the proteasome.30 Another target of CK2 is Ikaros (IKFZ1). However, as this tumor suppressor is a lymphoid transcription factor of special relevance in ALL, its regulation by CK2 will be discussed in more detail further on in this review.
Regulating endoplasmic reticulum stress/unfolded protein response signaling
Nutrient deprivation, hypoxia, proteasome dysfunction and sustained demands on the secretory pathway are conditions often encountered by cancer cells that can lead to the accumulation of misfolded proteins in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and cause ‘ER stress’. Unfolded protein response (UPR) encompasses a signaling network that constantly monitors the protein-folding status in the ER and initiates corrective measures for maintaining ER homeostasis.31 Recent findings suggest that tumor cells are prone to loss of proteostasis within the ER and that alterations of ER proteostasis are key players in cancer development and aggressiveness. Therefore, cancer cells could be susceptible to targeted drugs that either downregulate homeostatic UPR outputs or alternatively trigger terminal (pro-apoptotic) UPR.32 Emerging evidence suggests that CK2 has an important role in the control of ER stress/UPR signaling either by direct protein phosphorylation33 or by regulating the transcription of factors involved in ER stress/UPR signaling.34
How could CK2 control so many different pathways? An intriguing unifying hypothesis has been proposed. CK2 phosphorylates CDC37 (the co-chaperone of HSP90) at Ser 13.35 This phosphorylation strengthens the interactions between CDC37 and HSP90, thereby upregulating the HSP90 chaperoning machinery and increasing the association of HSP90 with client kinases (Akt, ERK, Raf, and so on). This would result in proper folding and maturation of protein kinases that are critical for cancer cells.
CK2 inhibitors
Progress on understanding the multiple roles played by CK2 has been boosted over the last decades by the availability of several chemical inhibitors (Figure 2). The first ATP-competitive CK2 inhibitor, 5,6-dichloro-1(b-d-ribofuranosyl)benzimidazole (DRB) was disclosed in 1986,36 32 years after CK2 was discovered by Burnett and Kennedy.3 However, a significant improvement in specificity was achieved with the ATP-competitive inhibitor 4,5,6,7-tetrabromo-2-azabenzimidazole (TBB),37 which was one of the first CK2 inhibitors used for cell treatment and was shown to induce apoptosis.38 2-dimethylamino-4,5,6,7-tetrabromo-1H-benzimidazole (DMAT) is a derivative of TBB and was demonstrated to have a superior efficacy and similar selectivity for CK2.39 However, both TBB and DMAT are effective in cells only at quite high concentrations. Moreover, their specificities are not absolute.40
Selected CK2 inhibitors. (a) DRB (5,6-dichloro-1(b-d-ribofuranosyl)benzimidazole), TBB (4,5,6,7-tetrabromo-2-azabenzimidazole), DMAT (2-dimethylamino-4,5,6,7-tetrabromo-1H-benzimidazole) and CX-4945, all of which are ATP-competitive compounds. (b) CIGB-300 is a peptide, whose primary structure is indicated by one-letter code; sequence in italics corresponds to the cell-penetrating peptide TAT, conjugated to the active moiety by β-alanine.
A major progress was represented by the discovery of CX-4945 (Silmitasertib), an orally bioavailable, ATP-competitive CK2 inhibitor that is efficacious in the low micromolar range in cells.41 CX-4945 was the first CK2 inhibitor that entered clinical trials for hematological and solid cancer treatment (ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01199718; NCT02128282; NCT00891280).
CIGB-300 is a clinical-stage CK2-specific cell-permeable peptide inhibitor (Figure 2) that modulates CK2 activity by binding to the phosphoacceptor site on CK2 targets.42 Although its mechanisms of action are not fully understood and off-target effects have been reported,43 CIGB-300 was effective in a variety of cancer cells where it reduced proliferation and induced apoptosis.44 Both local and systemic administration of CIGB-300 elicited significant anti-tumor effects in human cancers xenografted in nude mice.45 A phase I clinical trial in cervical cancer showed that CIGB-300 was safe and well tolerated.46
CK2 in acute and chronic leukemias
Evidence suggests that CK2 has leukemogenic potential, at least in mice. Indeed, transgenic mice with CK2α expression under the control of an immunoglobulin heavy chain promoter and enhancer were prone to develop leukemia/lymphoma, which was accelerated by a c-Myc transgene, resulting in neonatal leukemia.47 Moreover, co-expression of CK2α accelerated the development of T-cell ALL (T-ALL)/lymphoma resulting from transgenic expression of the TAL-1 oncogene in the thymus.48 Furthermore, p53-deficient CK2α transgenic mice developed thymic lymphomas much faster than their counterpart lacking the CK2 transgene.49 Overall, these findings documented that CK2 could be a major player in the oncogenic process, although it is not considered to be a classical oncogene, given the fact that no CK2 gain-of-function mutations have been described so far in cancer patients.
Since then, despite the disparate molecular events that drive the different human leukemia subtypes, high levels of CK2 appeared as a common denominator in all of them, suggesting that CK2 targeting could represent a multi-potential therapeutic strategy.
We will now review the evidence that links CK2 with the pathobiology of both acute and chronic leukemias (summarized in Table 1).
T-ALL
CK2 acts as a critical regulator of PI3K/Akt/mTOR signaling in T-ALL. This signaling network is overactive in most T-ALL cell lines and patient samples where it portends a poorer prognosis.50 It was demonstrated that most pediatric T-ALL patient samples did not harbor PTEN gene alterations, displayed normal PTEN messenger RNA levels and expressed higher PTEN protein levels than normal T-cell precursors, yet PIP3 levels and PI3K/Akt/mTOR signaling were upregulated when compared with healthy thymocyte subsets.51 PTEN overexpression was associated with decreased PTEN lipid phosphatase activity, resulting from CK2 overexpression and hyperactivation which targeted several Ser/Thr residues located at the C-terminal tail of PTEN. Treatment of T-ALL lymphoblasts and cell lines with TBB resulted in abrogation of C-terminal PTEN phosphorylation with concomitant activation of its lipid phosphatase activity and inhibition of Akt phosphorylation. These findings for the first time indicated that aberrant CK2 activity contributed to PI3K/Akt pathway upregulation in T-ALL cells, at least in part, through a PTEN post-translational inactivation.51 These results have been subsequently confirmed using the highly selective CK2 inhibitor, CX-4945.52
However, very recently, an unanticipated physiological role of CK2 has been disclosed in healthy human γδ thymocytes. Indeed, γδ thymocytes displayed higher, and T-cell receptor-inducible, CK2 activity than their αβ counterparts and were strikingly sensitive to apoptosis upon CK2 pharmacological inhibition.53 Nevertheless, CK2 upregulated Akt signaling pathway not only in healthy γδ thymocytes, but also in γδ T-ALL cells. When compared with healthy thymocytes or leukemic αβ T-cells, γδ T-ALL cells displayed increased CK2 activity, which was potentiated by CD27 co-stimulation, and enhanced apoptosis upon CK2 blockade by CX-4945. Importantly, CX-4945 was effective in delaying tumor growth in vivo in a xenograft model of human γδ T-ALL.53 Apart from the indication that targeting CK2 could be a therapeutic strategy especially effective for treating T-ALL patients with γδ lineage blasts that account for about 10% of total T-ALL cases, these findings are noteworthy for cancer immunotherapy, as γδ T-cells have been documented to have important roles in protective (anti-tumor) responses.54
Recent evidence has highlighted that CK2 is involved in the signals originating from the interleukin (IL)-7 receptor (IL-7R). Both interleukin-7 (IL-7) and its receptor are essential for healthy T-cell development and homeostasis, however aberrant IL-7/IL-7R-mediated signaling promotes and sustains T-ALL.55 While IL-7 had a minor but significant positive effect on CK2 activity in leukemic T-cells, CK2 activity was mandatory for optimal IL-7/IL-7R-dependent signaling.56 Indeed, CK2 pharmacological inhibition impaired both JAK1/STAT5 and PI3K/Akt pathway activation triggered by either IL-7 or by mutational activation of IL-7R. As a consequence, viability, growth and cell cycle progression of T-ALL cell lines and lymphoblasts were negatively affected. Furthermore, treatment of IL-7-dependent TAIL7 cells with a combination of CX-4945 and either a pan-JAK inhibitor or the JAK1/2 clinical-stage inhibitor ruxolitinib, synergized in preventing IL-7-mediated viability. Importantly, CK2 activity was required for the viability of T-ALL cells expressing a mutant IL-7R.56 Overall, this study identified CK2 as a major effector of IL-7/IL-7R signaling in T-ALL.
NOTCH1 activating mutations have been identified in ~50–60% of T-ALL cases and can be therapeutically targeted with γ-secretase inhibitors (GSIs). Mutant NOTCH1 can activate both c-MYC and PI3K/Akt signaling in T-ALL.57 Indeed, aberrant NOTCH1 signaling could transcriptionally downregulate PTEN expression through HES1 in T-ALL cell lines, thus dampening the efficacy of GSIs.57
However, it is not entirely clear whether NOTCH1 mutations are associated with decreased PTEN expression in primary T-ALL cells.58 It has been reported that, irrespectively of their NOTCH1 mutational status, pediatric T-ALL primary samples expressed significantly higher PTEN protein levels than healthy controls. Nevertheless, NOTCH1-mutated T-ALLs displayed a tendency to have lower PTEN protein levels than NOTCH1-wild-type samples.59 GSI treatment upregulated PTEN protein in T-ALL cells, however the increase was paralleled by PTEN phosphorylation at the CK2 target residue Ser 380. These findings suggested that the impact of NOTCH1-mediated PTEN transcriptional downregulation could be partially compensated at the protein level by CK2-dependent PTEN phosphorylation, stabilization and inactivation with a consequent hyperactivation of the PI3K/Akt pathway. Consistently, treatment of NOTCH1-mutated/PTEN-positive T-ALL cell lines and primary samples with both a GSI and a CK2 inhibitor, resulted in a cooperative effect in diminishing leukemic T-cell viability and proliferation.59 Therefore, the combination of a GSI with a CK2 inhibitor has the potential to promote PTEN reactivation at both the transcriptional and the post-translational level.
More recently, it has been shown that CK2 blockage synergized in vitro with the bromo- and extra-terminal domain (BET) inhibitor JQ1 in T-ALL cells with upregulated CK2 levels, NOTCH1 activation and high c-Myc expression.60 CX-4945 decreased the expression of activated NOTCH1 by increasing its proteasomal degradation. It should be considered that while CX-4945 induced a pro-apoptotic UPR,52 JQ1, by downregulating c-Myc, usually activates a pro-survival UPR.61 Therefore, it was hypothesized that CX-4945 and JQ1 could synergistically kill T-ALL cells by switching pro-survival to pro-apoptotic UPR.60
Notably, we have shown that CK2 pharmacological inhibition affects UPR in T-ALL cells, as demonstrated by a significant decrease in the levels of the main UPR regulator 78 kDa glucose-regulated protein/binding immunoglobulin protein (GRP78/BIP), and leads to apoptosis via upregulation of the ER stress/UPR cell death mediators inositol-requiring enzyme 1 α (IRE1α) and CCAAT-enhancer-binding protein homologous protein (CHOP).52 These findings indicate that modulation of the ER stress/UPR signaling through CK2 inhibition may indeed be exploited to induce apoptosis in T-ALL cells.
CK2 could be directly involved in drug resistance of T-ALL cells, as it has been shown that drug-resistant CCRF-CEM cells displayed higher expression levels of the CK2α catalytic subunit when compared to the parental cells.62 Drug-resistant CCRF-CEM cells overexpress the membrane transporter 170 kDa P-glycoprotein (P-gp), encoded by the ABCB1 gene,63 one of the major determinants of drug resistance in acute leukemias. Either pharmacological downregulation of CK2 activity or knockdown of CK2α expression by siRNA interference, induced cell death in drug-resistant CCRF-CEM cells. Even more importantly, CK2 inhibition promoted an increased uptake of chemotherapeutic drugs inside the leukemic cells and sensitized them to drug-induced apoptosis in a cooperative manner.62 The CK2-dependent mechanisms underlying drug resistance remain at present unclear. However, P-gp is a substrate of CK2.64 Therefore, the higher amounts of chemotherapeutic drugs accumulated in CCRF-CEM cells when CK2 activity was inhibited, might reflect a positive role had by CK2 in increasing P-gp activity.
Taken together, all of the aforementioned findings will be crucial to rationally develop targeted combination therapies, which include CK2 inhibitors for treating T-ALL patients.
B-ALL
A growing body of evidence supports the idea that an important function of CK2 in Ph- B-ALL involves the regulation of the transcription factor, IKZF1. IKZF1 is a tumor suppressor that is crucial for controlling the development and the functions of both B- and T-lymphocytes.65
IKZF1 mutations are frequent (20–30% of cases) in both pediatric and adult B-ALL cases and are associated with a poor patient outcome.66 IKZF1 stability and activity are regulated through a fine balance between protein phosphatase 1 (PP1) and CK2 activity.67 When phosphorylated by CK2, IKFZ1 displays reduced stability and activity.68 These effects could be reversed by PP1. Dovat’s group demonstrated that IKFZ1 controls B-ALL cell proliferation by repressing the expression of genes that promote both cell cycle progression and the PI3K/Akt/mTOR pathway.69 In a panel of patient-derived primary high-risk B-ALL xenografts, pharmacological inhibition of CK2 restored IKZF1 function as a transcriptional repressor of cell cycle- and PI3K/Akt/mTOR pathway-related genes, resulting in anti-leukemic effects both in vitro and in vivo. Interestingly, in high-risk leukemia where one IKZF1 allele had been deleted, CK2 inhibition restored the transcriptional repressor function of the remaining wild-type IKZF1 allele.69
The same group has subsequently shed light on other IKFZ1 functions that are controlled by CK2 in B-ALL cells. These include regulation of the expression of C-MYC (which controls transcription of genes related to cell cycle, survival and metabolism),70 MYCBP2 (a putative E3 ubiquitin ligase),70 of CRLF2 (a member of the type I cytokine receptor family),71 of DNM2 (a GTPase essential for intracellular vesicle formation and trafficking, cytokinesis and receptor endocytosis),72 of BCL6 (a proto-oncogene that is highly expressed in B-ALL) and of BACH2 (a suppressor of transcription).73 Moreover, IKFZ1 repressed transcription of the histone H3K4 demethylase, JARID1B, in B-ALL cells and IKZF1-mediated repression of JARID1B was impaired by CK2.74 Indeed, inhibition of CK2 resulted in increased binding of a IKFZ1-HDAC 1 complex to the promoter of JARID1B, with upregulated global levels of trimethylated histone H3 Lys 27 and decreased histone H3 Lys 9 acetylation.74 A schematic cartoon of CK2/IKFZ1 signaling in B-ALL is presented in Figure 3.
Schematic cartoon of CK2/IKFZ1 signaling in B-ALL. IKFZ1 is a tumor suppressor that controls the transcription of a number of genes critical for the leukemogenic process. CK2 phosphorylates and inactivates IKFZ1 function. The effects of CK2 are counteracted by PP1 and the CK2 inhibitor CX-4945. Arrows indicate activating events; perpendicular lines indicate inhibitory events. HDAC 1, histone deacetylase 1; IKFZ1, Ikaros; PI3K, phosphatidylinositol 3-phosphate kinase; PP1, protein phosphatase 1.
Similarly to T-ALL, CK2 phosphorylated and inactivated PTEN in B-ALL cells and this resulted in PI3K/Akt/mTOR activation.75 Consistently, CX-4945 reversed PTEN levels to those observed in healthy controls and promoted B-ALL cell death without significantly affecting normal bone marrow cells.75
Moreover, we have demonstrated that a combined treatment consisting of bortezomib and CX-4945 prevented B-ALL cells from adequately defending from the ER stress by activating UPR signaling.76 In this regard, it is worth remembering that bortezomib recently moved into the pediatric oncology arena, displaying encouraging results in several early phase clinical trials for relapsed B-ALL.77
An important role for CK2 has been identified in Ph+ B-ALL where it was found that the α subunit interacts with the Bcr moiety of both p190 and p210 Bcr-Abl fusion proteins in a region comprised between amino acidic residues 242 and 413.78 Treatment of Bcr-Abl+ leukemic cells with CK2 inhibitors resulted in growth arrest and apoptosis. Apoptosis increased when leukemic cells were treated with a drug combination consisting of DMAT and the TKI, imatinib,78, 79 while Bcr-Abl inhibition with imatinib resulted in downregulation of CK2 activity.78 This observation is interesting since CK2 has always been considered a constitutively active protein kinase, while this report suggests that Bcr-Abl could somehow positively regulate CK2 activity.
Overall, these findings have provided the rational for the use of CK2 inhibitors, either alone or in combination with other drugs already approved (for example, imatinib) or in clinical trials (for example, bortezomib), for B-ALL treatment, including high-risk cases with deletion of one IKZF1 allele or expressing Bcr-Abl.
Acute myelogenous leukemia
High-expression levels of CK2α subunit have been linked to a worse prognosis in AML patients with normal karyotype, both in terms of disease-free and overall survival.80 Indeed, upregulation of CK2α was associated with increased levels of a number of phosphoproteins belonging to the PI3K/Akt/mTOR pathway, including Bad, FoxO1, Bcl2 and Bcl-xL. Interestingly, overexpression of CK2α in AML cells was paralleled by a decrease in p53 protein levels. Remarkably, CK2 pharmacological inhibitors targeted not only the bulk of leukemic cells,80 but also the CD34+/CD38- AML cell subset,81 which is enriched in leukemia-initiating cells (LICs), the true target for leukemia eradication.82 CK2 inhibitor effects on LICs were potentiated by concomitant inhibition of PI3K activity, while this treatment had minimal effects on healthy hematopoietic stem cells.81 These early studies were subsequently substantiated by findings documenting that either CX-4945 or siRNA to CK2 caused p53-dependent AML cell apoptosis. Furthermore, CK2 inhibition was associated with a synergistic increase of the cytotoxic effects of daunorubicin.83
More recently, it has been highlighted that the CK2 catalytic α and regulatory β subunits were consistently overexpressed in LICs (CD34+/CD38−/Lin−) isolated from a cohort of AML patients. Analysis of messenger RNA expression showed that CKα expression in LICs was in most cases higher than twofold in comparison with a pool of healthy CD34+ hematopoietic stem cells. CK2 inactivation with either CX-4945 or siRNA induced an accumulation of LICs in the late S/G2/M phases of the cell cycle and triggered apoptosis.84 Moreover, upon CK2 inhibition, LICs displayed an increased sensitivity to doxorubicin. CK2 blockade was associated with a downmodulation of BMI-1, a proto-oncogene that is essential for LIC maintenance,85 as well as by a marked impairment of activation of Akt, NF-κB and STAT3 signaling. These findings are noteworthy as both Akt and NF-κB play critical roles for LIC biological properties. Importantly, combining CX-4945 and either doxorubicin or NF-κB or STAT3 inhibitors resulted in stronger cytotoxic effects on LICs.84 Therefore, this report clearly indicates that CK2 inhibition could be a rational approach to minimize the persistence of residual LICs.
Overall, the studies performed in preclinical models of AML have set the rationale for testing CK2 inhibitors in combination treatments with conventional and/or novel drugs in AML patients.
Chronic lymphocytic leukemia
A central role for CK2 has been demonstrated in CLL, where CK2 is overexpressed and hyperactive when compared to healthy B cells.86 Chemical inhibition of CK2 induced apoptosis of CLL cells without significantly affecting healthy B- and T-lymphocyte viability. Remarkably, this effect was not reversed by co-culturing with OP9 stromal cells, which were otherwise capable of rescuing CLL cells from in vitro spontaneous apoptosis. Upon induction of apoptosis by CK2 inhibition, inactivation of PKCβ and PKCδ, two PI3K downstream targets, was reported, which correlated with increased PTEN activity due to dephosphorylation, thus indicating that CK2 regulates CLL cell survival at least in part through phosphorylation-dependent PTEN inactivation and PI3K/PKC-signaling upregulation.86 However, It should be considered that, apart from its role as a negative regulator of the PI3K/Akt/mTOR pathway, PTEN can localize to the nucleus where it regulates genomic stability and cell proliferation/survival through mechanisms independent from its lipid phosphatase activity.87 Nuclear exclusion of PTEN is mediated by ubiquitin-specific-processing protease 7 (USP7)-dependent de-ubiquitination. Interestingly, CK2 was recently shown to be an upstream positive regulator of USP7 in CLL cells.88 A CK2 inhibitor, TBB, promoted PTEN nuclear localization, similarly to the USP7 inhibitor, P5091. Therefore, CK2 targeting could restore not only PTEN lipid phosphatase activity but also its shuttling to the nucleus. Expression of PTEN in the nucleus was associated with cell cycle blockage and induction of apoptosis, confirming the potent oncosuppressive role of PTEN in CLL.88
From a mechanistic point of view, it has been recently documented that CK2, complexed in the cytoplasm with CD5 and BLNK (B-cell linker) proteins, phosphorylated STAT3 at Ser 727 in CLL cells.89 Ser 727 p-STAT3 has an important role in CLL pathobiology, by activating a series of proliferative and anti-apoptotic genes.90 Indeed, phosphorylation at Ser 727 confers to STAT3 biologic activities similar to those of tyrosine phosphorylation, as Ser 727 p-STAT3 is shuttled to the nucleus where it binds to DNA and upregulates transcription.90 Therefore, STAT3 could be a yet another CK2 key target in CLL.
CK2 antagonists (DRB, TBB) induced apoptosis of CLL cells in all patient samples analyzed, however the sensitivity to CK2 downregulation correlated positively with the percentage of leukemic cells in the peripheral blood, β2 microglobulin serum levels and advanced clinical stage. In contrast, sensitivity to CK2 inhibition did not correlate with expression of either ZAP-70 or CD38, or with IGVH mutation status.86 These findings suggest that subsets of patients with aggressive CLL may benefit from therapeutic strategies targeting CK2. Subsequent studies, which took advantage of either the clinical-stage CK2 inhibitor, CX-4945,91, 92 or the cell-permeable peptide, CIGB-300,93 confirmed these earlier findings, not only in vitro but also against CLL cells xenografted in mice. Remarkably, CX-4945 was cytotoxic in vitro to samples from patients displaying cytogenetic abnormalities associated with poor outcome and chemotherapy resistance, such as 11q and 17p deletions.92 Of note, CX-4945 synergized with either fludarabine or the bruton tyrosine kinase (BTK) inhibitor, ibrutinib, when used in CLL primary cells.91 It is worth emphasizing here that ibrutinib is the first-in-class BTK inhibitor approved by the US Food and Drug Administration for treatment of CLL.94
Overall, all of these investigations indicated that CK2 has important roles in CLL cell survival, paving the ground for the inclusion of CK2 antagonists into future strategies, in combination with traditional chemotherapeutic agents, such as fludarabine, or novel targeted therapies.
Chronic myelogenous leukemia
In 1985, it was documented that CK2 expression was increased in leukemia cells from CML patients in blast crisis, as compared to healthy peripheral blood mononuclear cells.7 A subsequent study showed that CKα physically interacts with Bcr-Abl in CML K562 cells via the Abl portion of the fusion protein.95 More recently, it was found that in LAMA84 CML cells, characterized by imatinib resistance due to Bcr-Abl gene amplification, CK2 protein and catalytic activity were upregulated as compared to imatinib-sensitive cells. In resistant cells, CK2 co-localized with Bcr-Abl in the cytoplasm, and these two proteins were members of the same multi-protein complex(es).96 Treatment with CX-4945 counteracted the interactions between CK2 and Bcr-Abl and caused cell death by apoptosis. Importantly, a drug combination consisting of CX-4945 and imatinib displayed a synergistic effect in reducing viability of LAMA84 and other resistant CML cell lines, while knockdown of CK2α expression by siRNA restored the sensitivity to low imatinib concentrations. Therefore, these findings demonstrated that CK2 contributes to imatinib resistance in CML cells and suggested that CK2 inhibition could be a promising strategy for combination treatments in CML patients displaying TKI-resistance.96 Moreover, using imatinib-resistant cell lines, it was found that downregulation of CK2 by either CX-5011 (a CX-4945 derivative) or RNA interference caused a dramatic dephosphorylation of S6 ribosomal protein (S6RP) at Ser 235/236 without affecting MEK/ERK1/2 or PI3K/Akt/mTOR signaling, and concomitant reduction in protein translation.97 CK2 pharmacological inhibition induced apoptosis and acted synergistically with either imatinib or a MEK-inhibitor in reducing the viability of imatinib-resistant CML cells. These findings highlighted hyperphosphorylation of S6RP as a novel CK2-mediated mechanism of acquired imatinib resistance in CML cells and suggested that co-targeting CK2 and MEK could be another promising drug combination to restore imatinib responsiveness of TKI-resistant CML cells.97
In CML cells, Bcr-Abl controlled CK2-dependent PTEN phosphorylation with consequent inactivation of the lipid phosphatase activity.98 Accordingly, imatinib treatment reversed the effects of CK2 on PTEN. As expected, CK2 pharmacological targeting promoted PTEN reactivation with concomitant apoptosis induction. Importantly, CK2 inhibition induced apoptosis in imatinib-resistant primary CML cells carrying the T315I-Bcr-Abl mutation.98
A schematic cartoon of CK2-dependent signaling in CML is presented in Figure 4.
Schematic cartoon of CK2-mediated signaling in CML cells. (a) The Bcr moiety of Bcr-Abl interacts with and activates CK2 which then phosphorylates and inactivates PTEN. Bcr-Abl stimulates PI3K activity on PIP2 that yields PIP3. PIP3 has a fundamental role in Akt activation. Moreover, CK2, through an as yet unclear mechanism, phosphorylates S6RP, which controls translation. (b) Upon treatment with CK2 inhibitors, PI3K activity is dampened and PTEN is able to dephosphosphorylate PIP3 to PIP2. Therefore, Akt is inhibited. Translation is downregulated due to dephosphorylation of S6RP. Arrows indicate activating events; perpendicular lines indicate inhibitory events. PI3K, phosphatidylinositol 3-phosphate kinase; PIP2, phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate; PIP3, phosphatidylinositol 3,4,5-trisphosphate; S6RP, S6 ribosomal protein; TBB, 4,5,6,7-tetrabromo-2-azabenzimidazole.
In light of all of these findings, CK2 signaling has emerged as a potential novel target to achieve synthetic lethality with TKIs, suggesting that a combination therapy could help in eradicating Ph+ leukemias even in those cases characterized by TKI-resistance due to Bcr-Abl amplification or mutations.
Conclusions
The evidence reviewed here documents that CK2-dependent signals have a central role in the control of leukemia cell proliferation, survival and drug resistance, making CK2 an attractive target for anti-leukemic therapy. These findings have highlighted CK2 inhibitors as novel molecules to be tested in clinical trials aimed at treating both acute and chronic leukemias, although some fundamental outstanding issues still need to be addressed.
In particular, will inhibition of CK2 signaling negatively affect neoplastic blood cells without deleterious side effects on healthy cells? In other words, is there a therapeutic window when such a ubiquitous kinase is to be targeted? The fact that CK2 is often considered as a redundant kinase under normal conditions would suggest that adverse effects could be mild, although definitive evidence is still lacking in humans, whereas in mice, CK2 is required for CD4+ T-cell activation and differentiation into either Th2 or Th17 cells.99 In this connection, apoptosis elicited by CK2 inhibition in healthy human γδ T-cells needs to be considered very carefully, although these cells represent a very rare subset (1%) of total thymocytes.53 In an immunocompetent model of glioma in C57BL/6 mice, high doses of CX-4945 produced toxicities, reflected in weight loss and death in one case, with the maximal tolerated established at 600 mg/kg.100 However, whether these data translate to humans is not clear, since the adverse effects elicited by CX-4945 in cancer patients have not been disclosed as yet. It is also worth highlighting that CIGB-300 has been tested by intralesional administration in two phase I cervical cancer clinical trials. Overall, no maximum-tolerated dose or dose-limiting toxicity was observed, and the systemic adverse events were rash, facial edema, itching, hot flashes, and localized cramps,101 as well as moderate allergic-like reactions that likely reflected a strong correlation found between unincorporated CIGB-300 and histamine levels in blood.102
Importantly, preclinical settings have clearly indicated that the association of CK2 inhibitors with either conventional or novel drugs is likely to offer additional rational therapeutic approaches and a superior efficacy for leukemia treatment. These observations, together with growing preclinical data on the cross-talks between the different signaling cascades controlled by CK2, highlight the importance of a better design of future clinical trials. In particular, correlative or translational sub-studies need to be performed in parallel with the aim to clearly identify clinically feasible and reliable biomarkers of response as well as the emergence of resistance to CK2 inhibition, to guarantee more personalized and effective patient treatments. Future studies aimed to determine additional cell functions that might be regulated by CK2 in leukemias, will be of critical importance for the development of novel and efficacious targeted combination treatments.
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Acknowledgements
This work was in part supported by a grant (ERC CoG-648455) from the European Research Council, under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme, to JTB, who is also funded by Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (FCT investigator and FAPESP/20015/2014). We apologize to the authors whose work, although of importance, may have not been included in this review due to space constrains.
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Buontempo, F., McCubrey, J., Orsini, E. et al. Therapeutic targeting of CK2 in acute and chronic leukemias. Leukemia 32, 1–10 (2018). https://doi.org/10.1038/leu.2017.301
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/leu.2017.301
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