Unification of de novo and acquired ibrutinib resistance in mantle cell lymphoma

Xiaohong Zhao(Moffitt Cancer Center), Tint Lwin(Moffitt Cancer Center), Ariosto Silva(Moffitt Cancer Center), Bijal Shah(Moffitt Cancer Center), Jiangchuan Tao(Moffitt Cancer Center), Bin Fang(Moffitt Cancer Center), Liang Zhang(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Kai Fu(Nebraska Medical Center), Chengfeng Bi(Nebraska Medical Center), Jiannong Li(Moffitt Cancer Center), Huijuan Jiang(Tianjin Medical University General Hospital), Mark B. Meads(Moffitt Cancer Center), Timothy Jacobson(Moffitt Cancer Center), Maria João Silva(Moffitt Cancer Center), Allison Distler(Moffitt Cancer Center), Lancia Darville(Moffitt Cancer Center), Ling Zhang(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Ying Han(Tianjin Medical University Cancer Institute and Hospital), Dmitri Rebatchouk(Enzon Pharmaceuticals (United States)), Maurizio Di Liberto(Cornell University), Lynn C. Moscinski(Moffitt Cancer Center), John M. Koomen(Moffitt Cancer Center), William S. Dalton(Moffitt Cancer Center), Kenneth H. Shain(Moffitt Cancer Center), Michael Wang(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Eduardo M. Sotomayor(George Washington University), Jianguo Tao(Moffitt Cancer Center)
Nature Communications
April 18, 2017
Cited by 148Open Access
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Abstract

The novel Bruton's tyrosine kinase inhibitor ibrutinib has demonstrated high response rates in B-cell lymphomas; however, a growing number of ibrutinib-treated patients relapse with resistance and fulminant progression. Using chemical proteomics and an organotypic cell-based drug screening assay, we determine the functional role of the tumour microenvironment (TME) in ibrutinib activity and acquired ibrutinib resistance. We demonstrate that MCL cells develop ibrutinib resistance through evolutionary processes driven by dynamic feedback between MCL cells and TME, leading to kinome adaptive reprogramming, bypassing the effect of ibrutinib and reciprocal activation of PI3K-AKT-mTOR and integrin-β1 signalling. Combinatorial disruption of B-cell receptor signalling and PI3K-AKT-mTOR axis leads to release of MCL cells from TME, reversal of drug resistance and enhanced anti-MCL activity in MCL patient samples and patient-derived xenograft models. This study unifies TME-mediated de novo and acquired drug resistance mechanisms and provides a novel combination therapeutic strategy against MCL and other B-cell malignancies.


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