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Chronic Myeloid Leukemia (CML) Matt Walter Markey Program October 21, 2014 CML: paradigm for cancer treatment • Identify primary genetic abnormality • Develop an agent that targets that abnormality • Monitor for efficacy • Overcoming resistance Chronic Myeloid Leukemia Session Overview 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. Matt Walter = Hematopoiesis overview Dan Link = Signaling, animal models Peter Westervelt = Clinical overview * Steve Oh = Imatinib preclinical/clinical Geoff Uy = Imatinib resistance * Rizwan Romee = Bone marrow transplant * Jerry Radich = Guest speaker on CML Last class = round table lunch * Patient interviews Hematopoiesis Stem cell Bone marrow Blood Progenitors Terminally differentiated NEJM (2006) 354;19, p.2034 Hematopoietic growth factor (HGF) signaling Receptor Tyrosine Kinase (RTK) (ABL, non‐ Receptor TK) *Frequent targets for mutation in leukemia * * * * * NEJM (2006) 354;19, p.2034 Classification of Leukemias Lymphoid Myeloid CLL ALL CML AML Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia Acute Lymphocytic Leukemia Chronic Myeloid Leukemia Acute Myeloid Leukemia 10/100,000 1/100,000 2/100,000 (~6,000 new/year) 5/100,000 Acute = fast clinical progression. Block in differentiation (weeks to months) Chronic Leukemias & MPNs: differentiation occurs Terminally differentiated Blood Essential Thrombocytosis (ET) Chronic Myelo‐ Monocytic Leukemia (CMML) Polycythemia Vera (PV) Chronic Myeloid Leukemia (CML) Myeloproliferative Neoplasms (MPN) Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia (CLL) Genetics of Myeloproliferative Neoplasms (MPN) Myeloid Neoplasm with Eosinophilia (PDGFRA/B) Essential Thrombocytosis (ET) (JAK2) Polycythemia Vera (PV) (JAK2) Chronic Myeloid Leukemia (CML) (BCR:ABL) Mutation/rearrangement of tyrosine kinase genes Mastocytosis (KIT) Westervelt CML • 1.4:1 (♂:♀), average age 45 • Increased blood WBC (>25k/uL) • Minimal/no fibrosis or dysplasia Normal peripheral blood Granulocyte maturation basophil eosinophil Normal BM Peter Maslak, ASH Image Bank 2011; 2011-1083 CML blood CML chronic Blastic phase (block in differentiation) Westervelt CML • Chronic phase – Driven by BCR‐ABL – 50% no symptoms, found on routine CBC – ↑WBC PB, BM, spleen – Fatigue, weight loss, abdominal fullness, bleeding, sweats, large spleen/liver – 75% had accelerated phase 3‐18 months prior to blastic phase • Blast phase – Acquire secondary mutations – 1/3 = ALL, 2/3 = AML – Decreased response to treatment and duration not long lasting BCR:ABL fusion in CML • Cytogenetics = t(9;22), Philadelphia chromosome + (Ph+), (100% BCR‐ABL transcript) • BCR‐ABL transcript + Flemming draws first chromosome Tjio reports 46 chromosomes = normal syndromes Waldeyer coins “chromosome” Painter reports 48 chromosomes = normal 1890 von Hansemann observes mitotic aberrations in tumor cells “dark ages” Technical problems 1. better cultures 2. hypotonic solution 3. colchicine Down +21 Turner XO Klinefelter XXY 1960 Nowell & Hungerford = Ph chromosome & CML “The findings suggest a causal relationship between the chromosomal abnormality observed and chronic granulocytic leukemia”. Chromosome Gene Drug Baltimore, v‐Abl 1980 1960 1973 Nowell & Hungerford = Ph chromosome & CML Rowley reports Ph chr. = t(9;22) 1983‐84 Heisterkamp, Stephenson, Groffen, Grosveld clone genes at breakpoints (BCR, ABL) 1998‐2001 Druker uses Gleevec to treat CML v‐ABL oncogene Lymphosarcoma: virus‐induced thymic‐independent disease in mice. Abelson HT, Rabstein LS. Cancer Res. 1970 Aug;30(8):2213‐22 v‐Abl Cell. 1979 Dec;18(4):955‐62 Cell. 1980 Dec;22(3):777‐85 (coil‐coil) – p190 = 20‐30% ALL (most B‐cell) – p210 (p230) = 99% CML • ABL = Loss of N‐terminal Cap region of ABL, normally inhibits kinase activity • BCR = Gain coil‐coil of BCR allows dimerization of BCR‐ABL – Results in constitutive activation of the ABL tyrosine kinase. – Effects on cellular proliferation, survival and motility Dan Link Heisterkamp, Oncogene, 2002 ;21(56):8536‐40. What cell is transformed in CML? Stem cell Bone marrow Blood Progenitors Terminally differentiated Link NEJM (2006) 354;19, p.2034 Colony‐forming Cell Assay (progenitors) Bone Marrow Cells Culture with specific growth factors for 7-14 days CFU-GM (GM-CSF) Semi-solid media (methylcellulose) BFU-E (Epo) Methylcellulose cultures Hematopoietic Stem Cell Assays • HSC Definition: capable of long‐term (6 months) repopulation of ALL hematopoietic lineages • Bone marrow transplantation (gold standard) 9– Xenotransplantation models to assay human HSC • Long term culture‐initiating cell (LTC‐IC) assay Murine or Xenotransplantation radiation Human hematopoietic cells Mouse hematopoietic donor cells (CD45.2) NOD/SCID mice NOD/SCID gamma (NSG) (immunodeficient) congenic recipient mice (CD45.1) Analyze after 3-6 months for blood cells Analyze after 3-6 months for blood cells Better assays needed to study hematopoiesis • Methylcellulose and transplant assays are still the gold standard, but is there a faster, cheaper way to study these cells? • How can you prospectively identify the cells and isolate them to study? Flow cytometry Murine or Xenotransplantation radiation Human hematopoietic cells NOD/SCID mice (immunodeficient) Analyze after 3-6 months for blood cells CD34+ xenotransplant assays = 1:5000 HSCs CD34+/CD38- = 1:617 HSCs Mouse hematopoietic cells congenic mice (CD45.1/CD45.2) Kit+/Lineage-/Sca+ (KLS) cells = 1:10 HSCs CD150+/CD48- (SLAM) cells = 1:2 HSCs GOALS: 1) prospectively identify cells using flow cytometry (Weissman group = 1st mouse, 2nd human hematopoiesis). 2) Define what cell is transformed in CML (chronic phase and blast crisis). Stem cell Bone marrow Blood Progenitors Terminally differentiated 929 citations CMP MEP GMP MEP 288 single cells of each type No Epo+Tpo CMP GMP 200 cells each CMP Cytospin of 5 pooled colonies MEP GMP 1000 cells on stroma GMP CMP MEP Single cell sorted Lineage commitment at CMP single cell level: Regulation of Hematopoiesis • Transcription factors – Regulate RNA expression of target genes – Critical determinants of lineage commitment and terminal differentiation • Frequent targets for mutation in leukemia HUMAN PROGENITOR ASSAY PNAS (2002)99;18, p.11872 What cell is transformed in CML? Stem cell Bone marrow Blood Progenitors Terminally differentiated Link NEJM (2006) 354;19, p.2034 Oh Uy Romee Radich CML therapy Lancet (2007)370, p.342 Westervelt Oh Uy Radich Targeted therapy (chronic phase) • Imatinib = discovered in high‐throughput screen of kinase inhibitors. NEJM. 2003 Oct 9;349(15):1399‐401 Issues • Cure vs. control of chronic phase CML • Resistance in chronic phase CML • Treatment of blastic phase CML