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result(s) for
"Narayanagari, Swathi-Rao"
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Myelodysplastic syndrome progression to acute myeloid leukemia at the stem cell level
by
Reynolds, David
,
Narayanagari, Swathi-Rao
,
Will, Britta
in
631/67/1990
,
631/67/71
,
Acute myelocytic leukemia
2019
Myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) frequently progress to acute myeloid leukemia (AML); however, the cells leading to malignant transformation have not been directly elucidated. As progression of MDS to AML in humans provides a biological system to determine the cellular origins and mechanisms of neoplastic transformation, we studied highly fractionated stem cell populations in longitudinal samples of patients with MDS who progressed to AML. Targeted deep sequencing combined with single-cell sequencing of sorted cell populations revealed that stem cells at the MDS stage, including immunophenotypically and functionally defined pre-MDS stem cells (pre-MDS-SC), had a significantly higher subclonal complexity compared to blast cells and contained a large number of aging-related variants. Single-cell targeted resequencing of highly fractionated stem cells revealed a pattern of nonlinear, parallel clonal evolution, with distinct subclones within pre-MDS-SC and MDS-SC contributing to generation of MDS blasts or progression to AML, respectively. Furthermore, phenotypically aberrant stem cell clones expanded during transformation and stem cell subclones that were not detectable in MDS blasts became dominant upon AML progression. These results reveal a crucial role of diverse stem cell compartments during MDS progression to AML and have implications for current bulk cell–focused precision oncology approaches, both in MDS and possibly other cancers that evolve from premalignant conditions, that may miss pre-existing rare aberrant stem cells that drive disease progression and leukemic transformation.
High-resolution sequencing of longitudinal patient samples reveals subclonal mutational diversity in the stem cell compartment driving parallel evolution patterns in acute myeloid leukemia progression.
Journal Article
Co-targeting of BAX and BCL-XL proteins broadly overcomes resistance to apoptosis in cancer
2022
Deregulation of the BCL-2 family interaction network ensures cancer resistance to apoptosis and is a major challenge to current treatments. Cancer cells commonly evade apoptosis through upregulation of the BCL-2 anti-apoptotic proteins; however, more resistant cancers also downregulate or inactivate pro-apoptotic proteins to suppress apoptosis. Here, we find that apoptosis resistance in a diverse panel of solid and hematological malignancies is mediated by both overexpression of BCL-XL and an unprimed apoptotic state, limiting direct and indirect activation mechanisms of pro-apoptotic BAX. Both survival mechanisms can be overcome by the combination of an orally bioavailable BAX activator, BTSA1.2 with Navitoclax. The combination demonstrates synergistic efficacy in apoptosis-resistant cancer cells, xenografts, and patient-derived tumors while sparing healthy tissues. Additionally, functional assays and genomic markers are identified to predict sensitive tumors to the combination treatment. These findings advance the understanding of apoptosis resistance mechanisms and demonstrate a novel therapeutic strategy for cancer treatment.
Deregulation of the BCL-2 family interactions ensures cancer resistance to apoptosis and is a major challenge to current treatments. Here the authors describe a novel therapeutic strategy to overcome two anti-apoptotic mechanisms for cancer therapy.
Journal Article
New IDH1 mutant inhibitors for treatment of acute myeloid leukemia
2015
Gain of function mutations in isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 (IDH1) have been detected in cases of acute myeloid leukemia (AML). The application of an allosteric IDH1 inhibitor in AML cells promotes blast differentiation and restores DNA cytosine methylation patterns.
Neomorphic mutations in isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 (IDH1) are driver mutations in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and other cancers. We report the development of new allosteric inhibitors of mutant IDH1. Crystallographic and biochemical results demonstrated that compounds of this chemical series bind to an allosteric site and lock the enzyme in a catalytically inactive conformation, thereby enabling inhibition of different clinically relevant IDH1 mutants. Treatment of IDH1 mutant primary AML cells uniformly led to a decrease in intracellular 2-HG, abrogation of the myeloid differentiation block and induction of granulocytic differentiation at the level of leukemic blasts and more immature stem-like cells,
in vitro
and
in vivo
. Molecularly, treatment with the inhibitors led to a reversal of the DNA cytosine hypermethylation patterns caused by mutant IDH1 in the cells of individuals with AML. Our study provides proof of concept for the molecular and biological activity of novel allosteric inhibitors for targeting different mutant forms of IDH1 in leukemia.
Journal Article
Pharmacological inhibition of the transcription factor PU.1 in leukemia
by
Narayanagari, Swathi-Rao
,
Poon, Gregory M.K.
,
Paul, Ananya
in
Acute myelocytic leukemia
,
Acute myeloid leukemia
,
Allosteric Regulation
2017
The transcription factor PU.1 is often impaired in patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Here, we used AML cells that already had low PU.1 levels and further inhibited PU.1 using either RNA interference or, to our knowledge, first-in-class small-molecule inhibitors of PU.1 that we developed specifically to allosterically interfere with PU.1-chromatin binding through interaction with the DNA minor groove that flanks PU.1-binding motifs. These small molecules of the heterocyclic diamidine family disrupted the interaction of PU.1 with target gene promoters and led to downregulation of canonical PU.1 transcriptional targets. shRNA or small-molecule inhibition of PU.1 in AML cells from either PU.1lo mutant mice or human patients with AML-inhibited cell growth and clonogenicity and induced apoptosis. In murine and human AML (xeno)transplantation models, treatment with our PU.1 inhibitors decreased tumor burden and resulted in increased survival. Thus, our study provides proof of concept that PU.1 inhibition has potential as a therapeutic strategy for the treatment of AML and for the development of small-molecule inhibitors of PU.1.
Journal Article
A small-molecule allosteric inhibitor of BAX protects against doxorubicin-induced cardiomyopathy
by
Narayanagari, Swathi-Rao
,
Santulli, Gaetano
,
Amgalan, Dulguun
in
Animals
,
Apoptosis
,
Apoptosis - physiology
2020
Doxorubicin remains an essential component of many cancer regimens, but its use is limited by lethal cardiomyopathy, which has been difficult to target, owing to pleiotropic mechanisms leading to apoptotic and necrotic cardiac cell death. Here we show that BAX is rate-limiting in doxorubicin-induced cardiomyopathy and identify a small-molecule BAX inhibitor that blocks both apoptosis and necrosis to prevent this syndrome. By allosterically inhibiting BAX conformational activation, this compound blocks BAX translocation to mitochondria, thereby abrogating both forms of cell death. When co-administered with doxorubicin, this BAX inhibitor prevents cardiomyopathy in zebrafish and mice. Notably, cardioprotection does not compromise the efficacy of doxorubicin in reducing leukemia or breast cancer burden in vivo, primarily due to increased priming of mitochondrial death mechanisms and higher BAX levels in cancer cells. This study identifies BAX as an actionable target for doxorubicin-induced cardiomyopathy and provides a prototype small-molecule therapeutic.
Journal Article
Publisher Correction: Myelodysplastic syndrome progression to acute myeloid leukemia at the stem cell level
by
Reynolds, David
,
Narayanagari, Swathi-Rao
,
Will, Britta
in
631/67/1990
,
631/67/71
,
Biomedical and Life Sciences
2019
In the version of this article originally published, Ulrich Steidl’s name was listed as “and Ulrich Steidl.” His name has been updated to “Ulrich Steidl.” The error has been fixed in the print, PDF and HTML versions of this article.
Journal Article
Pharmacological inhibition of the transcription factor PU.1 in leukemia
by
Antony-Debre, Ileana
,
Farahat, Abdelbasset A
,
Narayanagari, Swathi-Rao
in
Acute myelocytic leukemia
,
Care and treatment
,
Genetic aspects
2017
The transcription factor PU.1 is often impaired in patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Here, we used AML cells that already had low PU.1 levels and further inhibited PU.1 using either RNA interference or, to our knowledge, first-in-class smallmolecule inhibitors of PU.1 that we developed specifically to allosterically interfere with PU.1-chromatin binding through interaction with the DNA minor groove that flanks PU.1-binding motifs. These small molecules of the heterocyclic diamidine family disrupted the interaction of PU.1 with target gene promoters and led to downregulation of canonical PU.1 transcriptional targets. shRNA or small-molecule inhibition of PU.1 in AML cells from either [PU.1.sup.lo] mutant mice or human patients with AML-inhibited cell growth and clonogenicity and induced apoptosis. In murine and human AML (xeno)transplantation models, treatment with our PU.1 inhibitors decreased tumor burden and resulted in increased survival. Thus, our study provides proof of concept that PU.1 inhibition has potential as a therapeutic strategy for the treatment of AML and for the development of small-molecule inhibitors of PU.1.
Journal Article
New IDH1 mutant inhibitors for treatment of acute myeloid leukemiaf
2015
Neomorphic mutations in isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 (IDH1) are driver mutations in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and other cancers. We report the development of new allosteric inhibitors of mutant IDH1. Crystallographic and biochemical results demonstrated that compounds of this chemical series bind to an allosteric site and lock the enzyme in a catalytically inactive conformation, thereby enabling inhibition of different clinically relevant IDH1 mutants. Treatment of IDH1 mutant primary AML cells uniformly led to a decrease in intracellular 2-HG, abrogation of the myeloid differentiation block and induction of granulocytic differentiation at the level of leukemic blasts and more immature stem-like cells, in vitro and in vivo. Molecularly, treatment with the inhibitors led to a reversal of the DNA cytosine hypermethylation patterns caused by mutant IDH1 in the cells of individuals with AML. Our study provides proof of concept for the molecular and biological activity of novel allosteric inhibitors for targeting different mutant forms of IDH1 in leukemia.
Journal Article
Novel IDH1 Mutant Inhibitors for Treatment of Acute Myeloid Leukemia
Neomorphic mutations in isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 (IDH1) are driver mutations in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and other cancers. We report the development of new allosteric inhibitors of mutant IDH1. Crystallographic and biochemical results demonstrated that compounds of this chemical series bind to an allosteric site and lock the enzyme in a catalytically inactive conformation, thereby enabling inhibition of different clinically relevant IDH1 mutants. Treatment of IDH1 mutant primary AML cells uniformly led to a decrease in intracellular 2-HG, abrogation of the myeloid differentiation block and induction of granulocytic differentiation at the level of leukemic blasts and more immature stem-like cells, in vitro and in vivo. Molecularly, treatment with the inhibitors led to a reversal of the DNA cytosine hypermethylation patterns caused by mutant IDH1 in AML patients’ cells. Our study provides proof-of-concept for the molecular and biological activity of novel allosteric inhibitors for targeting different mutant forms of IDH1 in leukemia.
Journal Article
Exploiting an Epigenetic Resistance Mechanism to PI3 Kinase Inhibition in Leukemic Stem Cells
2025
Acquired non-genetic resistance mechanisms to existing therapies contribute to poor outcomes for acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients, and inability to target leukemic stem cells (LSCs) can lead to relapse. To overcome these challenges, we tested whether LSCs have dependencies on PI3 kinase (PI3K). We found that LSCs are susceptible to isoform-selective targeting of PI3K and are particularly dependent on the P110 alpha isoform of PI3K. We discovered that PI3K inactivation leads to dynamic changes in EZH2/PRC2 function in leukemic cells, and we uncovered downregulation of EZH2 protein levels as a resistance mechanism in response to PI3K inhibition. We found that PI3K inhibition in AML cells can lead to compensatory upregulation of EZH1, and that EZH1 knockdown can sensitize AML cells to PI3K inhibition. We leveraged this resistance mechanism by combining a PI3K inhibitor with an EZH1/2 dual inhibitor, which successfully overcomes the acquired resistance and leads to sustained targeting of AML cells ex vivo and in murine AML and PDX models in vivo. This study identifies a promising novel therapeutic regimen for targeting LSCs in AML.
Journal Article