UGT2B17 modifies drug response in chronic lymphocytic leukaemia
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Published:2020-05-18
Issue:2
Volume:123
Page:240-251
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ISSN:0007-0920
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Container-title:British Journal of Cancer
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Br J Cancer
Author:
Allain Eric P.,Rouleau Michèle,Vanura Katrina,Tremblay Sophie,Vaillancourt Joanie,Bat Vincent,Caron Patrick,Villeneuve Lyne,Labriet Adrien,Turcotte Véronique,Le Trang,Shehata Medhat,Schnabl Susanne,Demirtas Dita,Hubmann Rainer,Joly-Beauparlant Charles,Droit Arnaud,Jäger Ulrich,Staber Philipp B.,Lévesque Eric,Guillemette Chantal
Abstract
Abstract
Background
High UGT2B17 is associated with poor prognosis in untreated chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL) patients and its expression is induced in non-responders to fludarabine-containing regimens. We examined whether UGT2B17, the predominant lymphoid glucuronosyltransferase, affects leukaemic drug response and is involved in the metabolic inactivation of anti-leukaemic agents.
Methods
Functional enzymatic assays and patients’ plasma samples were analysed by mass-spectrometry to evaluate drug inactivation by UGT2B17. Cytotoxicity assays and RNA sequencing were used to assess drug response and transcriptome changes associated with high UGT2B17 levels.
Results
High UGT2B17 in B-cell models led to reduced sensitivity to fludarabine, ibrutinib and idelalisib. UGT2B17 expression in leukaemic cells involved a non-canonical promoter and was induced by short-term treatment with these anti-leukaemics. Glucuronides of both fludarabine and ibrutinib were detected in CLL patients on respective treatment, however UGT2B17 conjugated fludarabine but not ibrutinib. AMP-activated protein kinase emerges as a pathway associated with high UGT2B17 in fludarabine-treated patients and drug-treated cell models. The expression changes linked to UGT2B17 exposed nuclear factor kappa B as a key regulatory hub.
Conclusions
Data imply that UGT2B17 represents a mechanism altering drug response in CLL through direct inactivation but would also involve additional mechanisms for drugs not inactivated by UGT2B17.
Funder
Gouvernement du Canada | Canadian Institutes of Health Research
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Cancer Research,Oncology
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