Abstract
Many acute myeloid leukaemias (AMLs) express high levels of BCL-2 and MCL-1, especially after therapy. To test the impact of these anti-apoptotic proteins on AML development and treatment, we used haemopoietic reconstitution to generate MLL-AF9 AMLs expressing BCL-2 or Mcl-1 transgenes. AMLs with elevated BCL-2 or MCL-1 had a higher proportion of mature myeloid cells but, like conventional MLL-AF9 AMLs, were readily transplantable. Short-term cell lines established from multiple primary AMLs of each genotype were tested in vitro for susceptibility to chemotherapeutics currently used for treating AML (daunorubicin, etoposide, cytarabine); the proteasome inhibitor bortezomib; CDK7/9 inhibitors; and BH3 mimetics, which bind and inhibit pro-survival proteins. The BH3 mimetics tested, alone and in combination with the other drugs, were: ABT-737 which, like its clinical counterpart navitoclax, targets BCL-2, BCL-XL and BCL-W; BCL-2-specific ABT-199 (venetoclax); BCL-XL-specific A-1331852; and S63845, a new MCL-1-specific BH3 mimetic. As single agents, daunorubicin and bortezomib had the greatest efficacy. Elevated MCL-1 or BCL-2 reduced sensitivity to daunorubicin but, surprisingly, not to bortezomib. MCL-1 markedly enhanced resistance to ABT-737 and ABT-199 but not S63845, and BCL-2 increased resistance to S63845 but not to ABT-737 or ABT-199. Notable synergies were achieved by combining BH3 mimetics with daunorubicin: S63845 increased the sensitivity of both MCL-1 and BCL-2 overexpressing MLL-AF9 AMLs, and ABT-737 aided in killing those overexpressing BCL-2. Synergy between daunorubicin and ABT-199 was also apparent in vivo, although not curative. Impressive synergistic responses were achieved for human MLL-fusion AML cell lines treated with daunorubicin plus either ABT-737, ABT-199 or S63845, and with ABT-199 plus S63845, with or without daunorubicin. Our data suggest that AML patients may benefit from combining conventional cytotoxic drugs with BH3 mimetics targeting BCL-2 or MCL-1 or, if tolerated, both these agents.
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Introduction
Acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) is a relentless proliferation of myeloid cells that results in catastrophic bone marrow failure. Although AML can arise from diverse types of genetic changes, individual tumours generally carry only two to four driver mutations [1]. Balanced chromosomal translocation/inversion events giving rise to chimaeric fusion genes are common in AML, particularly in children and younger adults and in therapy-induced AML. Many of these involve the MLL (mixed lineage leukaemia) gene located on chromosome 11 band q23, which encodes a large multi-domain epigenetic regulator [2]. The translocation breakpoint separates the N-terminal DNA binding domain of MLL from its C-terminal histone H3 lysine 4 (H3K4) methyl transferase domain, thereby disabling its methyl transferase activity. The eight genes that most frequently recombine with MLL in translocations encode proteins involved in multi-component transcription elongation complexes [3]. Therefore, most MLL translocations, including the t(9;11) that produces the MLL-AF9 fusion gene, deregulate transcription of MLL target genes [4, 5].
Many AML patients have a dismal prognosis and more effective therapies are sorely needed [6]. Standard treatment involves administration of cytarabine (ara-C) together with an anthracycline (usually daunorubicin or idarubicin) and sometimes also etoposide [6]. While cytarabine interferes with DNA replication, provoking premature chain termination [7], the anthracylines and etoposide inhibit topoisomerase II, increasing the frequency of double-stranded breaks [8]. Anthracyclines are also believed to generate reactive oxygen species and inhibit DNA and RNA synthesis [9]. All these agents invoke apoptosis via the intrinsic (also called mitochondrial) apoptosis pathway, which is regulated by the BCL-2 protein family.
BCL-2 family members serve as a cellular life/death switch (reviewed in ref. [10]). BCL-2 and its closest relatives (BCL-XL, BCL-W, MCL-1 and A1/BFL-1) promote cell survival by preventing activation of structurally similar but pro-apoptotic relatives BAX and BAK on the mitochondrial outer membrane (MOM). Stress signals, such as DNA damage or oncogene expression, upregulate distant relatives known as BH3-only (BCL-2 homology domain 3-only) proteins, which bind tightly via their BH3 domains to the hydrophobic surface groove of the pro-survival proteins, thereby preventing their restraint of BAX and BAK. Certain BH3-only proteins (BIM, tBID, PUMA and possibly others) can also bind transiently to the surface groove of BAX and BAK, inducing a major conformational change that prompts homo-dimerisation. BAX/BAK homo-dimers aggregate to form homo-oligomeric pores, through which cytochrome c egresses and initiates activation of caspases that cleave vital cellular proteins.
Many AMLs express high levels of pro-survival BCL-2 or MCL-1 [11–13], especially upon relapse after therapy [14]. Importantly, using conditional gene deletion in mice, MCL-1 has been shown to be essential for the development and sustained growth of AML induced by c-Myc or MLL-fusion genes [11, 15]. These observations led us to test the impact of overexpression of MCL-1 or BCL-2 on the development and treatment of MLL-AF9 AML in mice. In particular, we were keen to test responsiveness to recently developed BH3 mimetics (drugs that mimic BH3-only proteins) and to agents reported to downregulate MCL-1, such as CDK7/9 inhibitors [16, 17] and the proteasome inhibitor bortezomib [18], which is being trialled clinically for AML [19].
Results
Generation of murine MLL-AF9 AMLs overexpressing BCL-2 or MCL-1
We have previously developed transgenic mice with pan-haemopoietic overexpression of human BCL-2 or mouse MCL-1 protein [20, 21]. To generate MLL-AF9 AMLs, foetal liver haemopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs) from these and WT mice (all C57BL/6-Ly5.2) were infected with MLL-AF9/GFP or GFP (control) retroviruses and transplanted into sublethally irradiated C57BL/6-Ly5.1 recipient mice (Fig. 1a). For brevity, the reconstituted mice are designated hereafter according to the genotype of the donor foetal liver cells and the virus used (e.g. WT/GFP indicates mice reconstituted with WT foetal liver cells infected with control GFP virus and Mcl-1tg/MLL-AF9 indicates mice reconstituted with Mcl-1tg foetal liver cells infected with MLL-AF9/GFP virus).
Overexpression of MCL-1 or BCL-2 exacerbates MLL-AF9 AML
Three weeks after reconstitution, most MLL-AF9 mice, especially those transplanted with infected cells from Mcl-1tg or BCL-2tg mice, had elevated white blood cell counts and enlarged spleens compared to the corresponding control GFP mice (Fig. 1b, c). Even at this early time point, the blood, spleen and bone marrow of the MLL-AF9 mice was replete with donor-derived provirus-expressing (Ly5.2+GFP+) cells having a myeloid (Mac1+) phenotype (Supplementary Figure S1 and Table S1).
Despite provoking more severe early leukocytosis, overexpression of MCL-1 or BCL-2 did not accelerate morbidity (Fig. 1d). Irrespective of whether their reconstituting stem/progenitor cells were WT, Mcl-1tg or BCL-2tg in genotype, all MLL-AF9 mice required ethical euthanasia within 60 days, whereas the corresponding control GFP mice remained healthy until they were culled (70–90 d). The spleen, bone marrow and blood of the sick mice were dominated by donor-derived (Ly5.2+GFP+) myeloid (Mac1+Gr1- and Mac1+Gr1+) cells (Supplementary Figure S2). Of note, the AML phenotype appeared more extreme in terminally ill Mcl-1tg/MLL-AF9 and BCL-2tg/MLL-AF9 mice than in WT/MLL-AF9 mice; leukocytosis and splenomegaly were more severe (Fig. 1e, f) and anaemia and thrombocytopenia more pronounced (Fig. 1g, h). Histological analysis (Supplementary Figure S3) revealed total effacement of the bone marrow, disruption of splenic architecture and leucocyte infiltration of organs such as kidney, pancreas and liver.
In general, sick Mcl-1tg/MLL-AF9 and BCL-2tg/MLL-AF9 mice had a higher proportion of mature myeloid cells and a lower proportion of blasts than sick WT/MLL-AF9 mice, as evidenced by blood smears, bone marrow cytospins and flow cytometry (Fig. 2, Supplementary Figures S2, S4, S5a and Table S2). Primary MLL-AF9 AMLs lacking expression of the BH3-only protein BIM [22] had a similar phenotype (Fig. 2b, Supplementary Figure S4). We infer that the more severe leukocytosis in Mcl-1tg/MLL-AF9, BCL-2tg/MLL-AF9 and Bim−/−/MLL-AF9 AML-bearing mice reflects enhanced survival of maturing myeloid cells.
Transplantability tests in non-irradiated congenic mice (Supplementary Table S3) confirmed that all three genotypes were fully malignant. Of note, the transplanted secondary Mcl-1tg/MLL-AF9 and BCL-2tg/MLL-AF9 AMLs still had a greater proportion of differentiated cells than transplanted WT/MLL-AF9 AMLs but the tertiary transplants were all dominated by undifferentiated blasts (Supplementary Figure S5).
Expression of BCL-2 protein family members in primary AMLs
Western blot analysis was performed on bone marrow cells from 8 to 10 AML-bearing mice of each genotype (Fig. 3). All WT/MLL-AF9 AML samples had readily detectable levels of endogenous MCL-1, BCL-2 and BCL-XL (A1 and BCL-W were not analysed). Endogenous MCL-1 levels were comparable between WT/MLL-AF9 and BCL-2tg/MLL-AF9 AMLs (size overlap with apparent degradation products of transgenic protein prevented the assessment of endogenous MCL-1 in Mcl-1tg/MLL-AF9 AMLs). Interestingly, endogenous BCL-2 and BCL-XL were lower in the BCL-2tg/MLL-AF9 AMLs than in WT/MLL-AF9 AMLs. By comparison, although 5 of 8 Mcl-1tg/MLL-AF9 AMLs analysed had lower endogenous BCL-2 than the WT AMLs, none had lower BCL-XL.
Analysis for five BH3-only proteins (Fig. 3, lower panels) showed that all ten WT/MLL-AF9 AMLs expressed relatively uniform levels of BID, PUMA, BIM and (with one exception) BMF, but NOXA expression was prominent in only four. Of note, BIM, BMF and NOXA levels were higher in Mcl-1tg/MLL-AF9 and BCL-2tg/MLL-AF9 than WT/MLL-AF9 tumours.
Impact of MCL-1 or BCL-2 on drug sensitivity
To gauge drug sensitivity, short-term cell lines were established from multiple (≥5) independent primary tumours of each genotype. In addition to standard genotoxic agents (cytarabine, daunorubicin and etoposide), we tested the proteasome inhibitor bortezomib, four CDK7/9 inhibitors, which inhibit transcription [23] and thereby diminish the level of short-lived proteins such as MCL-1 [17], and four BH3 mimetics having different specificities: ABT-737, which binds BCL-2, BCL-XL and BCL-W; [24] BCL-2-specific ABT-199; [25] MCL-1-specific S63845; [26] and BCL-XL-specific A-1331852 [27]. Cell viability was determined at 24 h by measuring metabolic activity (CellTiter-Glo luminescence) (Fig. 4) and, for most agents, by enumerating cells excluding annexin V and propidium iodide (Supplementary Figure S6). Inhibition of cell death by the pan-caspase inhibitor Q-VD-OPh confirmed that the drugs acted by inducing apoptosis (Supplementary Figure S6c–e).
As single agents, daunorubicin was the most potent of the genotoxic drugs (Fig. 4c) and overexpression of either MCL-1 or BCL-2 increased resistance 13.5 and 5.1 fold respectively. Bortezomib was as active against the WT/MLL-AF9 AMLs as daunorubicin but, perhaps surprisingly, overexpression of BCL-2 or MCL-1 did not confer resistance. CDK inhibitors flavopiridol, PIK-75 and dinaciclib were more potent than SNS-032 and, while overexpression of MCL-1 or BCL-2 increased resistance, this was more apparent in the apoptosis (Supplementary Figure S6) than the metabolic assay (Fig. 4).
To assess the impact of the CDK inhibitors and bortezomib on apoptosis regulators, western blot analysis was performed on two AML lines of each genotype following drug exposure for 6 h in the presence of Q-VD-OPh (Fig. 5, Supplementary Figure S7). PIK-75, flavopiridol and SNS-032 reduced MCL-1 levels in each genotype in a dose-dependent manner, even in the Mcl-1tg/MLL-AF9 tumours. Responsiveness varied, but in general SNS-032 was less effective at reducing MCL-1 than PIK-75 and flavopiridol. SNS-032 treatment increased NOXA in one Mcl-1tg/MLL-AF9 tumour but not the other.
Bortezomib treatment did not decrease MCL-1 in any of the MLL-AF9 AMLs, in contrast to certain other cell types [18, 28]. Indeed, levels rose in several, despite the increased NOXA, which would be expected to bind and facilitate proteasome-mediated degradation [29]. Q-VD-OPh may have precluded caspase-mediated degradation of MCL-1 triggered by the proteasome inhibitor [30]. Alternatively, MCL-1 in AML cells may be bound to BIM, which prevents MCL-1 degradation rather than enhancing it [31].
p53 was low to undetectable in the three treated AMLs analysed, suggesting that it is probably wild type, as is common in human AMLs [32].
Sensitivity of MLL-AF9 AMLs to BH3 mimetics
As single agents, the BH3 mimetics were not highly active against the MLL-AF9 AMLs, BCL-XL-specific A-1331852 being the least active (Fig. 4b, c and Supplementary Figure S6b). Importantly, however, MLL-AF9 AMLs overexpressing BCL-2 (blue) were just as sensitive as WT-MLL-AF9 AMLs (orange) to ABT-737 and ABT-199, while highly resistant to S63845. Conversely, although those overexpressing MCL-1 (pink) were very resistant to ABT-737 and ABT-199, as expected, they were just as sensitive to S63845 as WT/MLL-AF9 AMLs, even though S63845 has a 6-fold lower affinity for mouse as compared to human MCL-1 [26].
To test whether the BH3 mimetics could synergise with any of the drugs under test, we treated 5 independent primary AML lines of each genotype to ABT-737 or S63845, either alone or in combination with the other drugs, at multiple concentrations, using high throughput robotics. Bliss analysis [33, 34] revealed significant synergies (positive scores) for certain drug combinations.
Figure 6a, b shows the outcome for daunorubicin. With the WT/MLL-AF9 AMLs (left panels), inclusion of ABT-737 (Bliss 87.3) increased sensitivity more than inclusion of S63845 (Bliss 9.5). As anticipated, BCL-2tg/MLL-AF9 AMLs (right panels) were more sensitive to daunorubicin plus ABT-737 (Bliss sum 1314.1) than to daunorubicin plus S63845 (Bliss sum 272.1) and, conversely, the Mcl-1tg/MLL-AF9 AMLs (middle panels) were more sensitised by the MCL-1-specific BH3 mimetic (Bliss sum 227.1) than by ABT-737 (Bliss sum 99.1).
A similar pattern was noted with cytarabine, flavopiridol, and PIK-75 (Supplementary Figures S8, S9); the MCL-1 overexpressing AMLs were sensitised by S63845 to a greater extent than by ABT-737, and the BCL-2 overexpressing AMLs were sensitised more by ABT-737 than by S63845.
Notably, the AMLs also responded well to combining S63845 and ABT-199; any residual resistance to one BH3 mimetic at a particular concentration was significantly or completely overcome by including the other (Fig. 6c, d).
Drug sensitivity of human AML cell lines
We also tested three human MLL-fusion AML cell lines: THP-1, MOLM-13 and MV4;11 [35,36,37] (Fig. 7). Each expresses BCL-2, BCL-W, and MCL-1, with BCL-XL and BFL-1 being low or undetectable (Fig. 7b). EC50s were determined using CellTiter-Glo (Fig. 7a). THP-1 cells were the most resistant to daunorubicin, ABT-737 and ABT-199; and MV4;11 cells were the most sensitive to S63845. All lines were resistant to A-1331852, which was not tested further.
ABT-737, ABT-199 and S63845 were then tested in combination with daunorubicin (Fig. 7d–f); and ABT-199 plus S63845 was tested with or without daunorubicin (Fig. 7g, h). Each combination was significantly synergistic. Of note, Bliss scores of ~ 1000 were achieved for each human cell line by combining ABT-199 and S63845 (Fig. 7h). BH3 mimetics act downstream of p53 and, as predicted, the combination was effective even for THP-1 cells, which lack functional p53 (see Fig. 7c).
In vivo tests of drug sensitivity
To investigate whether ABT-737 could increase sensitivity to daunorubicin in vivo, bone marrow cells from 4 independent secondary WT/MLL-AF9 AMLs and BCL-2tg/MLL-AF9 AMLs were transplanted into non-irradiated syngeneic recipients and treatment was begun 3 days later (Fig. 8a). Although drug treatment extended the life of the animals transplanted with WT/MLL-AF9 AMLs by 5 days, the combination of daunorubicin with ABT-737 was no more effective than daunorubicin alone. Comparable results were obtained for BCL-2tg/MLL-AF9 AMLs.
Using the same AMLs, we also tested the efficacy of BCL-2-specific ABT-199 (Fig. 8b, c). ABT-199 had some efficacy as a single agent (compare curves for ABT-199 (yellow) and vehicle controls (pink)), probably because it could be used at a higher concentration (100 mg/kg) than ABT-737 (75 mg/kg) and has a somewhat higher affinity for BCL-2 [25]. Using the same dose of daunorubicin (5 mg/kg) as with ABT-737, combination therapy with ABT-199 was more efficacious than treatment with daunorubicin alone, for tumours of both genotypes (Fig. 8b; p < 0.001 for WT/MLL-AF9 AMLs, p < 0.05 for BCL-2tg/MLL-AF9 AMLs), although all treated mice still died within 30 days. The benefit of combination therapy with ABT-199 was still apparent at a lower dose of daunorubicin (3 mg/kg) for BCL-2tg/MLL-AF9 AMLs (p < 0.05) although not for WT/MLL-AF9 AMLs (Fig. 8c).
We were unable to use S63845 at high enough concentrations to effectively test its efficacy in vivo against the Mcl-1tg/MLL-AF9 AMLs, which overexpress mouse MCL-1.
Discussion
AML remains a major clinical challenge [32], with little improvement in patient outcomes over the past 30 years. The high levels of pro-survival proteins BCL-2 and MCL-1 commonly found in AMLs [11, 12, 38], especially after relapse [14], are thought to contribute to resistance to therapy. In this study, we directly tested the impact of MCL-1 and BCL-2 using the well-studied MLL-AF9 mouse model.
Impact on AML development
Elevated expression of BCL-2 or MCL-1 had no significant impact on the kinetics of morbidity of MLL-AF9-driven AML (Fig. 1d), in contrast to Myc-driven B lymphoid malignancy, which was markedly accelerated by BCL-2 or Mcl-1 transgenes [21, 39]. However, the much faster tumour development in the AML model permits little scope for acceleration.
There were, nonetheless, intriguing differences between WT/MLL-AF9 AMLs and those overexpressing BCL-2 or MCL-1. Leukocytosis became apparent earlier and was more severe in the BCL-2tg/MLL-AF9 and Mcl-1tg/MLL-AF9 mice (Fig. 1) and the AML phenotype was more differentiated, as were MLL-AF9 AMLs lacking the pro-apoptotic BH3-only protein BIM [22] (Fig. 2 and Supplementary Figure S4, S5). These observations suggest that blocking apoptosis enhances the in vivo lifespan of maturing MLL-AF9-driven leucocytes. However, in contrast to results for a mouse model of the myelodysplastic syndrome [40], leukaemic transformation was unaffected, as the BCL-2tg/MLL-AF9 and Mcl-1tg/MLL-AF9 AMLs were fully and serially transplantable in non-irradiated mice (Supplementary Table S3).
Transgenic overexpression of MCL-1 and BCL-2 appeared to modulate the expression pattern of other BCL-2 family members (Fig. 3). Of note, higher levels of BIM, BMF and NOXA were apparent in Mcl-1tg/MLL-AF9 and BCL-2tg/MLL-AF9 AMLs than in WT/MLL-AF9 AMLs, suggesting that elevated pro-survival proteins had preserved MLL-AF9-driven cells experiencing stress-induced upregulation of these pro-apoptotic BH3-only proteins. Furthermore, the BCL-2tg/MLL-AF9 AMLs had lower levels of endogenous BCL-2 and BCL-XL than the WT/MLL-AF9 AMLs, suggestive of lower selection pressure to upregulate these endogenous pro-survival proteins. Comparable changes were less apparent for the Mcl-1tg/MLL-AF9 AMLs, probably because the level of transgenic MCL-1 protein is not as high as that of transgenic BCL-2 [41], although five of eight had lower endogenous BCL-2 than WT/MLL-AF9 AMLs. Overall, these results suggest that MLL-AF9 expression imposes considerable cytotoxic stress on haemopoietic cells, either directly or indirectly, and this selects for upregulation of pro-survival proteins. Genetic studies have shown that endogenous MCL-1 is essential for the development and sustained expansion of AML driven by MLL-fusion genes, whereas BCL-XL, BCL-2 and BCL-W play lesser roles [15].
Impact on drug sensitivity
In vitro tests of drug sensitivity were performed using short-term cell lines derived from five primary AMLs of each genotype (Fig. 4, Supplementary Figure S5). Four classes of drugs were used: cytotoxic drugs routinely used to treat AML (daunorubicin, cytarabine and etoposide); the proteasome inhibitor bortezomib, which is being trialled for AML; [19] CDK7/9 inhibitors that inhibit transcription and thereby reduce levels of short-lived proteins such as MCL-1; [16, 17, 42] and BH3 mimetics targeting different pro-survival BCL-2 family members: ABT-737 (which targets BCL-2, BCL-XL and BCL-W) [24, 28], ABT-199 (venetoclax) (specific for BCL-2) [25], A-1331852 (specific for BCL-XL) [34, 43] and S63845 (specific for MCL-1) [26].
The WT/MLL-AF9 AMLs were far more sensitive to daunorubicin (EC50 5.9 nM) than to etoposide or cytarabine (EC50s of 200 nM and 530 nM respectively) and, as predicted, overexpression of MCL-1 or BCL-2 increased resistance (Fig. 4). MCL-1 was as inhibitory as BCL-2, which suggests it is more potent, given the lower level of the transgenic protein [41]. Our gene knock-out studies have previously shown that responsiveness to daunorubicin, etoposide and cytarabine is dependent on the BH3-only proteins PUMA and NOXA and that BIM also plays a role in responsiveness to cytarabine [22].
PIK-75, a dual inhibitor of CDK9 and PI3K, has been shown to be active against cytologically diverse primary human AML samples [17]. However, neither PIK-75 nor the other CDK7/9 inhibitors were as cytotoxic as daunorubicin against the mouse MLL-AF9 AMLs, despite reducing MCL-1 protein levels in a dose-dependent manner, even in the Mcl-1tg/MLL-AF9 tumours.
In contrast, bortezomib was very potent, even in the face of high BCL-2 or MCL-1. Our previous study [22] showed that NOXA is very important for bortezomib-mediated killing of MLL-AF9 AMLs. NOXA levels are high in most MLL-AF9 AMLs we tested, particularly those overexpressing MCL-1 or BCL-2 (Fig. 3). NOXA strongly binds to and inhibits pro-survival MCL-1 [44, 45], which is vital for the development and sustained growth of AMLs driven by MLL-fusion genes [15]. Presumably NOXA levels are sufficiently elevated by bortezomib to overcome MCL-1 even in the Mcl-1tg/MLL-AF9 AMLs.
BH3 mimetics bind tightly to the surface groove of their target pro-survival proteins, thereby preventing them from binding to BH3-only proteins and to activated BAX and/or BAK molecules (see [10, 46] and references therein). In doing so, the BH3 mimetics increase the availability of BH3-only proteins to carry out their death-promoting functions. As single agents, the BH3 mimetics were not highly potent against WT/MLL-AF9 AMLs, BCL-XL-specific A-1331852 being the least effective. Overexpression of MCL-1 dramatically increased resistance to ABT-737 and ABT-199 but, importantly, BCL-2 overexpressing lines were as sensitive as WT/MLL-AF9 AMLs (Fig. 4). Conversely, overexpression of BCL-2 increased resistance to the MCL-1-specific S63845, but overexpression of MCL-1 did not.
Of note, when ABT-737 and S63845 were tested in vitro in combination with the other cytotoxics (Fig. 6, Supplementary Figures S8, S9), significant synergies could be achieved. With daunorubicin, those overexpressing MCL-1 were more sensitised by the MCL-1-specific S63845 (Bliss sum 227.1) than by ABT-737 (Bliss sum 99.1), and those overexpressing BCL-2 were more sensitised by the BCL-2-binding compound ABT-737 (Bliss sum 1314), although S63845 also had clear impact (Bliss sum 272.1) (Fig. 6). In view of the approximately 6-fold greater affinity of S63845 for human versus mouse MCL-1 [26], these results predict that S63845 would exhibit even greater synergy in human cells, as was demonstrated for three MLL-fusion AMLs (Fig. 7).
To investigate whether synergy with daunorubicin extended to treatment in vivo, we transplanted multiple independent WT/MLL-AF9 and BCL-2tg/MLL-AF9 AMLs into immunocompetent recipients, which were then treated with: ABT-737 or ABT-199 alone, daunorubicin alone, ABT-737 or ABT-199 plus daunorubicin, or no drug (Fig. 7). ABT-199 showed modest efficacy as a single agent for the BCL-2 overexpressing AMLs, whereas ABT-737 did not, probably because the dosage had to be lower and ABT-199 has somewhat higher affinity for BCL-2 [25]. Mouse survival increased significantly when ABT-199 was combined with daunorubicin, for both the WT/MLL-AF9 and BCL-2tg/MLL-AF9 AMLs. Pertinently, a recent in vitro study of primary human AML cells found that venetoclax synergised with another anthracycline (idarubicin) and also cytarabine [13].
Looking forward, while BH3 mimetics and other targeted therapies seem unlikely to replace standard chemotherapeutics for AMLs, their combination with current regimens may significantly improve outcomes. For AMLs expressing both BCL-2 and MCL-1 it could be advantageous to include agents targeting both BCL-2 and MCL-1, should this prove tolerable.
Venetoclax (ABT-199), approved for use in refractory chronic lymphocytic leukaemia, is being trialled in combination therapies for other lymphoid leukaemias and lymphomas [10, 47]. Venetoclax and S63845 were recently shown to have encouraging efficacy against primary human AML cells in vitro; some AMLs were responsive to both, others only to one or the other [26]. Promising results have also been reported for venetoclax as monotherapy in a phase II trial for relapsed or refractory AML [48] and emerging preclinical and clinical data suggest that venetoclax combination therapy may significantly improve outcomes [13, 49,50,51,52,53]. Accordingly, venetoclax has received Breakthrough Therapy Designation for treatment-naïve AML patients ineligible to receive high dose chemotherapy.
Phase 1 clinical trials are just beginning for S63845 and two other recently reported MCL-1-specific BH3 mimetics. Valid safety concerns have been raised by reports of MCL-1 dependence for mouse cardiomyocytes [54], hepatocytes [55] and neurons [56]. Nevertheless, Mcl-1+/- mice, which model the impact of permanent 50% inhibition of MCL-1, are normal and healthy [57], suggesting that a suitable therapeutic window may well be found, especially for intermittent treatment.
Materials and methods
AML generation
AMLs were generated by MLL-AF9 retroviral transduction of haemopoietic stem/progenitor cells (HSPC) and reconstitution of sublethally irradiated C57BL/6-Ly5.1 mice, as described [5, 58] except that E14.5 foetal liver was the source of HSPC rather than bone marrow [22]. Mice were monitored regularly and euthanased when showing severe AML symptoms (hunched stance, ruffled coat, lethargy, anaemia and splenomegaly) or significant weight loss. Histological and haemopoietic analysis is detailed in the Supplementary Methods. Mouse survival analysis utilised GraphPad Prism and significance was determined using Log-rank (Mantel–Cox) test.
Cell lines
Human MLL-fusion AML cell lines MV4;11 [37] and THP-1 [35] were from ATCC (American Type Culture Collection; VI, USA) and Molm-13 [36] from DSMZ (Deutsche Sammlung von Mikroorganismen und Zellkulturen; Leibniz, Germany). Culture medium was RPMI 1640 + 10% FBS, with inclusion of 50 μM 2-mercaptoethanol for THP-1 cells.
In vitro drug treatment
Short-term MLL-AF9 AML lines were generated as described [22] and drug sensitivity was determined by flow cytometric analysis of apoptosis or high throughput CellTiter-Glo (Promega, Madison WI, USA) measurement of metabolic activity (see Supplementary Methods). Drug sensitivity of human MLL-fusion AML cell lines was determined by CellTiter-Glo assay on a microplate reader (LUMIstar OPTIMA, Germany).
In vivo drug treatment
Primary tumours were expanded in vivo and transplanted into non-irradiated recipient mice as previously described [22] to generate secondary tumours, which developed after 13–50 d. Drug treatment of transplanted secondary tumours was performed as published [22, 59]. Briefly, this involved intravenous injection of daunorubicin (3 mg/kg or 5 mg/kg) or an equal volume of saline on days 1, 4 and 9, followed by a flush of saline, and either ABT-737 (75 mg/kg injected intraperitoneally) or ABT-199 (100 mg/kg administered by oral gavage), or equal volume of vehicle, on days 1 to 5 and days 8 to 12. Mice were euthanased at ethical endpoint.
See Supplementary Materials and Methods for mice, haemopoietic analysis, drug treatment and western blotting.
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Acknowledgements
We thank our colleagues JM Adams, A Wei and A Strasser for review of the manuscript; S Glaser, H Jousset, David Huang, K Lowes, D Segal and C Burns for advice and reagents; M Robati, P Novello, G Siciliano, K Hughes, J Corbin and J McManus for technical assistance and mouse husbandry; and the institute’s flow cytometry and histology facilities for skilled support. This work was supported by funding from the NHMRC (Australia) (program grants 1016701, 113577 and project grants 1058746, 1122783); US Leukaemia and Lymphoma Society Specialized Center for Research Grant 7001-13; Leukaemia Foundation of Australia; and infrastructure support to the institute from the NHMRC Independent Research Institute Infrastructure Support Scheme (IRISS 9000220) and the Victorian State Government Operational Infrastructure Support (OIS).
Author contributions
SC conceived the project; NSA and RAB performed most of the experiments, with contributions from ZX, CJV and AN and co-supervision by CJV and SC; SC and NSA wrote the manuscript.
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The Walter and Eliza Hall Institute (WEHI) (but not the authors) received research funding from Genentech and Abbott Laboratories (now Abbvie) for the development of BH3 mimetics and as a consequence now receives royalty income. WEHI scientists (but not the authors) have also received research funding from Servier for preclinical testing of MCL-1−specific BH3 mimetics.
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Anstee, N.S., Bilardi, R.A., Ng, A.P. et al. Impact of elevated anti-apoptotic MCL-1 and BCL-2 on the development and treatment of MLL-AF9 AML in mice. Cell Death Differ 26, 1316–1331 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41418-018-0209-1
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41418-018-0209-1
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