BCR-ABL1 compound mutations in tyrosine kinase inhibitor–resistant CML: frequency and clonal relationships

Jamshid S. Khorashad(University of Utah), Todd W. Kelley(University of Utah), Philippe Szankasi(University of Utah), Clinton C. Mason(University of Utah), Simona Soverini(University of Bologna), Lauren T. Adrian(Oregon Health & Science University), Christopher A. Eide(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Matthew S. Zabriskie(University of Utah), Thoralf Lange(Leipzig University), Johanna Estrada(University of Utah), Anthony D. Pomicter(University of Utah), Anna M. Eiring(University of Utah), Ira L. Kraft(University of Utah), David J. Anderson(University of Utah), Zhimin Gu(University of Utah), Mary Alikian(Hammersmith Hospital), Alistair Reid(Hammersmith Hospital), Letizia Foroni(Hammersmith Hospital), David Marin(Hammersmith Hospital), Brian Druker(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Thomas O’Hare(University of Utah), Michael W. Deininger(University of Utah)
Blood
December 6, 2012
Cited by 223

Abstract

BCR-ABL1 compound mutations can confer high-level resistance to imatinib and other ABL1 tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs). The third-generation ABL1 TKI ponatinib is effective against BCR-ABL1 point mutants individually, but remains vulnerable to certain BCR-ABL1 compound mutants. To determine the frequency of compound mutations among chronic myeloid leukemia patients on ABL1 TKI therapy, in the present study, we examined a collection of patient samples (N = 47) with clear evidence of 2 BCR-ABL1 kinase domain mutations by direct sequencing. Using a cloning and sequencing method, we found that 70% (33/47) of double mutations detected by direct sequencing were compound mutations. Sequential, branching, and parallel routes to compound mutations were common. In addition, our approach revealed individual and compound mutations not detectable by direct sequencing. The frequency of clones harboring compound mutations with more than 2 missense mutations was low (10%), whereas the likelihood of silent mutations increased disproportionately with the total number of mutations per clone, suggesting a limited tolerance for BCR-ABL1 kinase domain missense mutations. We conclude that compound mutations are common in patients with sequencing evidence for 2 BCR-ABL1 mutations and frequently reflect a highly complex clonal network, the evolution of which may be limited by the negative impact of missense mutations on kinase function.


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