Pretreatment Mitochondrial Priming Correlates with Clinical Response to Cytotoxic Chemotherapy

Tríona Ní Chonghaile(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Kristopher A. Sarosiek(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Thanh-Trang T. Vo(Harvard University), Jeremy Ryan(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Anupama Tammareddi(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Victoria Del Gaizo Moore(Elon University), Jing Deng(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Kenneth C. Anderson(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Paul G. Richardson(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Yu‐Tzu Tai(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Constantine S. Mitsiades(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Ursula A. Matulonis(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Ronny Drapkin(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Richard M. Stone(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Daniel J. DeAngelo(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), David J. McConkey(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Stephen E. Sallan(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Lewis B. Silverman(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Michelle S. Hirsch(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Daniel R. Carrasco(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Anthony Letai(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute)
Science
October 28, 2011
Cited by 584

Abstract

Cytotoxic chemotherapy targets elements common to all nucleated human cells, such as DNA and microtubules, yet it selectively kills tumor cells. Here we show that clinical response to these drugs correlates with, and may be partially governed by, the pretreatment proximity of tumor cell mitochondria to the apoptotic threshold, a property called mitochondrial priming. We used BH3 profiling to measure priming in tumor cells from patients with multiple myeloma, acute myelogenous and lymphoblastic leukemia, and ovarian cancer. This assay measures mitochondrial response to peptides derived from proapoptotic BH3 domains of proteins critical for death signaling to mitochondria. Patients with highly primed cancers exhibited superior clinical response to chemotherapy. In contrast, chemoresistant cancers and normal tissues were poorly primed. Manipulation of mitochondrial priming might enhance the efficacy of cytotoxic agents.


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