BCR-ABL alternative splicing as a common mechanism for imatinib resistance: evidence from molecular dynamics simulations

TS Lee, W Ma, X Zhang, F Giles, J Cortes… - Molecular cancer …, 2008 - AACR
TS Lee, W Ma, X Zhang, F Giles, J Cortes, H Kantarjian, M Albitar
Molecular cancer therapeutics, 2008AACR
Rare cases of chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) express high levels of alternatively
spliced BCR-ABL mRNA with a 35-bp insertion (35INS) between ABL kinase domain exons
8 and 9. This insertion results in a frameshift leading to the addition of 10 residues and
truncation of 653 residues due to early termination. Sensitive PCR-based testing showed
that 32 of 52 (62%) imatinib-resistant CML patients in chronic phase and 8 of 38 (21%) in
accelerated or blast crisis expressed varying levels of the alternatively spliced BCR-ABL …
Abstract
Rare cases of chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) express high levels of alternatively spliced BCR-ABL mRNA with a 35-bp insertion (35INS) between ABL kinase domain exons 8 and 9. This insertion results in a frameshift leading to the addition of 10 residues and truncation of 653 residues due to early termination. Sensitive PCR-based testing showed that 32 of 52 (62%) imatinib-resistant CML patients in chronic phase and 8 of 38 (21%) in accelerated or blast crisis expressed varying levels of the alternatively spliced BCR-ABL mRNA. A three-dimensional structural model of the 35INS ABL kinase domain complexed with imatinib was built using homology modeling, followed by molecular dynamics simulations. Simulation results showed that the new residues cause a significant global conformational change, altering imatinib binding in a way similar to that of the T315I mutation and, therefore, providing resistance to imatinib that depends on the level of expression. [Mol Cancer Ther 2008;7(12):3834–41]
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