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Human chronic myeloid leukemia stem cells are insensitive to imatinib despite inhibition of BCR-ABL activity
Amie S. Corbin, … , Michael W. Deininger, Brian J. Druker
Amie S. Corbin, … , Michael W. Deininger, Brian J. Druker
Published December 13, 2010
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2011;121(1):396-409. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI35721.
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Research Article

Human chronic myeloid leukemia stem cells are insensitive to imatinib despite inhibition of BCR-ABL activity

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Abstract

Imatinib therapy, which targets the oncogene product BCR-ABL, has transformed chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) from a life-threatening disease into a chronic condition. Most patients, however, harbor residual leukemia cells, and disease recurrence usually occurs when imatinib is discontinued. Although various mechanisms to explain leukemia cell persistence have been proposed, the critical question from a therapeutic standpoint — whether disease persistence is BCR-ABL dependent or independent — has not been answered. Here, we report that human CML stem cells do not depend on BCR-ABL activity for survival and are thus not eliminated by imatinib therapy. Imatinib inhibited BCR-ABL activity to the same degree in all stem (CD34+CD38–, CD133+) and progenitor (CD34+CD38+) cells and in quiescent and cycling progenitors from newly diagnosed CML patients. Although short-term in vitro imatinib treatment reduced the expansion of CML stem/progenitors, cytokine support permitted growth and survival in the absence of BCR-ABL activity that was comparable to that of normal stem/progenitor counterparts. Our findings suggest that primitive CML cells are not oncogene addicted and that therapies that biochemically target BCR-ABL will not eliminate CML stem cells.

Authors

Amie S. Corbin, Anupriya Agarwal, Marc Loriaux, Jorge Cortes, Michael W. Deininger, Brian J. Druker

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Figure 8

Model of CML disease persistence with imatinib treatment.

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Model of CML disease persistence with imatinib treatment.
Orange cells r...
Orange cells represent CML cells in a BCR-ABL–active state. Gray cells, which indicate lack of BCR-ABL activity, are either normal (nonleukemic) cells or CML cells in which BCR-ABL is suppressed by imatinib treatment. Brown cells represent stroma, and small dark brown circles are secreted cytokines. (A) BCR-ABL activity drives expansion of primitive CML cells. (B) Imatinib treatment inhibits BCR-ABL activity in CML stem cells, restoring normal homeostasis and eliminating the proliferative advantage of leukemic cells. Normal hematopoiesis is reestablished; however, the bone marrow microenvironment supports survival of CML stem cells that are not oncogene addicted.

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ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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