ATR inhibition induces synthetic lethality and overcomes chemoresistance in TP53- or ATM-defective chronic lymphocytic leukemia cells

Marwan Kwok(Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham), Nicholas Davies(University of Birmingham), Angelo Agathanggelou(University of Birmingham), Edward Smith(University of Birmingham), Ceri Oldreive(University of Birmingham), Eva Petermann(University of Birmingham), Grant S. Stewart(University of Birmingham), Jeff Brown(AstraZeneca (United States)), Alan Lau(AstraZeneca (United Kingdom)), Guy Pratt(Heartlands Hospital), Helen Parry(Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham), A. Malcolm R. Taylor(University of Birmingham), Paul Moss(Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham), Peter Hillmen(University of Leeds), Tatjana Stanković(Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham)
Blood
November 13, 2015
Cited by 273

Abstract

TP53 and ataxia telangiectasia mutated (ATM) defects are associated with genomic instability, clonal evolution, and chemoresistance in chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). Currently, therapies capable of providing durable remissions in relapsed/refractory TP53- or ATM-defective CLL are lacking. Ataxia telangiectasia and Rad3-related (ATR) mediates response to replication stress, the absence of which leads to collapse of stalled replication forks into chromatid fragments that require resolution through the ATM/p53 pathway. Here, using AZD6738, a novel ATR kinase inhibitor, we investigated ATR inhibition as a synthetically lethal strategy to target CLL cells with TP53 or ATM defects. Irrespective of TP53 or ATM status, induction of CLL cell proliferation upregulated ATR protein, which then became activated in response to replication stress. In TP53- or ATM-defective CLL cells, inhibition of ATR signaling by AZD6738 led to an accumulation of unrepaired DNA damage, which was carried through into mitosis because of defective cell cycle checkpoints, resulting in cell death by mitotic catastrophe. Consequently, AZD6738 was selectively cytotoxic to both TP53- and ATM-defective CLL cell lines and primary cells. This was confirmed in vivo using primary xenograft models of TP53- or ATM-defective CLL, where treatment with AZD6738 resulted in decreased tumor load and reduction in the proportion of CLL cells with such defects. Moreover, AZD6738 sensitized TP53- or ATM-defective primary CLL cells to chemotherapy and ibrutinib. Our findings suggest that ATR is a promising therapeutic target for TP53- or ATM-defective CLL that warrants clinical investigation.


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