GM-CSF-dependent pSTAT5 sensitivity is a feature with therapeutic potential in chronic myelomonocytic leukemia

GM-CSF 依赖性 pSTAT5 敏感性是慢性粒单核细胞白血病具有治疗潜力的特征

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作者:Eric Padron, Jeffrey S Painter, Sateesh Kunigal, Adam W Mailloux, Kathy McGraw, Jessica M McDaniel, Eunhee Kim, Christopher Bebbington, Mark Baer, Geoffrey Yarranton, Jeffrey Lancet, Rami S Komrokji, Omar Abdel-Wahab, Alan F List, Pearlie K Epling-Burnette

Abstract

Granulocyte-macrophage-colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) hypersensitivity is a hallmark of juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia (JMML) but has not been systematically shown in the related human disease chronic myelomonocytic leukemia (CMML). We find that primary CMML samples demonstrate GM-CSF-dependent hypersensitivity by hematopoietic colony formation assays and phospho-STAT5 (pSTAT5) flow cytometry compared with healthy donors. Among CMML patients, the pSTAT5 hypersensitive response positively correlated with high-risk disease, peripheral leukocytes, monocytes, and signaling-associated mutations. When compared with IL-3 and G-CSF, GM-CSF hypersensitivity was cytokine specific and thus a possible target for intervention in CMML. To explore this possibility, we treated primary CMML cells with KB003, a novel monoclonal anti-GM-CSF antibody, and JAK2 inhibitors. We found that an elevated proportion of immature GM-CSF receptor-α(R) subunit-expressing cells were present in the bone marrow myeloid compartment of CMML. In survival assays, we found that myeloid and monocytic progenitors were sensitive to GM-CSF signal inhibition. Our data indicate that a committed myeloid precursor expressing CD38 may represent the progenitor population with enhanced GM-CSF dependence in CMML, consistent with results in JMML. These preclinical data indicate that GM-CSF signaling inhibitors merit further investigation in CMML and that GM-CSFR expression on myeloid progenitors may be a biomarker for this therapy.

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