Targeting of the N-terminal coiled coil oligomerization interface by a helix-2 peptide inhibits unmutated and imatinib-resistant BCR/ABL

Tim Beissert, Alena Hundertmark, Velina Kaburova, Lorena Travaglini, Afsar A. Mian, Clara Nervi, Martin Ruthardt

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

38 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The BCR/ABL oncogene is responsible for the phenotype of Philadelphia chromosome-positive (Ph+) leukemia. BCR/ABL exhibits an aberrant ABL-tyrosine kinase activity. The treatment of advanced Ph+ leukemia with selective ABL-kinase inhibitors such as Imatinib, Nilotinib and Dasatinib is initially effective but rapidly followed by resistance mainly because of specific mutations in BCR/ABL. Tetramerization of ABL through the N-terminal coiled-coil region (CC) of BCR is essential for the ABL-kinase activation. Targeting the CC-domain forces BCR/ABL into a monomeric conformation reduces its kinase activity and increases the sensitivity for Imatinib. We show that (i) targeting the tetramerization by a peptide representing the Helix-2 of the CC efficiently reduced the autophosphorylation of both unmutated and mutated BCR/ABL; (ii) Helix-2 inhibited the transformation potential of BCR/ABL independently of the presence of mutations; and (iii) Helix-2 efficiently cooperated with Imatinib as revealed by their effects on the transformation potential and the factor-independence related to BCR/ABL with the exception of mutant T315I. These findings support earlier observations that BCR/ABL harboring the T315I mutation have a transformation potential that is at least partially independent of its kinase activity. These data provide evidence that the inhibition of tetramerization inhibits BCR/ABL-mediated transformation and can contribute to overcome Imatinib-resistance.

Original languageEnglish (UK)
Pages (from-to)2744-2752
Number of pages9
JournalInternational Journal of Cancer
Volume122
Issue number12
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 15 Jun 2008
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • BCR/ABL
  • Imatinib-resistance
  • Molecular targeting
  • Oligomerization
  • Ph+ leukemia

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