Arginine deprivation using pegylated arginine deiminase has activity against primary acute myeloid leukemia cells in vivo
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Farideh Miraki-Moud Essam Ghazaly Linda Ariza-Mcnaughton Katharine A Hodby Andrew Clear Fernando Dos Anjos Afonso Konstantinos Liapis Marianne Grantham Fareeda Sohrabi Jamie Cavenagh John S Bomalaski John G Gribben Peter W Szlosarek Dominique Bonnet David C TaussigAbstract
The strategy of enzymatic degradation of amino acids to deprive malignant cells of important nutrients is an established component of induction therapy of acute lymphoblastic leukemia. Here we show that acute myeloid leukemia (AML) cells from most patients with AML are deficient in a critical enzyme required for arginine synthesis, argininosuccinate synthetase-1 (ASS1). Thus, these ASS1-deficient AML cells are dependent on importing extracellular arginine. We therefore investigated the effect of plasma arginine deprivation using pegylated arginine deiminase (ADI-PEG 20) against primary AMLs in a xenograft model and in vitro. ADI-PEG 20 alone induced responses in 19 of 38 AMLs in vitro and 3 of 6 AMLs in vivo, leading to caspase activation in sensitive AMLs. ADI-PEG 20-resistant AMLs showed higher relative expression of ASS1 than sensitive AMLs. This suggests that the resistant AMLs survive by producing arginine through this metabolic pathway and ASS1 expression could be used as a biomarker for response. Sensitive AMLs showed more avid uptake of arginine from the extracellular environment consistent with their auxotrophy for arginine. The combination of ADI-PEG 20 and cytarabine chemotherapy was more effective than either treatment alone resulting in responses in 6 of 6 AMLs tested in vivo. Our data show that arginine deprivation is a reasonable strategy in AML that paves the way for clinical trials.
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Journal Blood
Volume 125
Issue number 26
Pages 4060-4068
Available online
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Publisher website (DOI) 10.1182/blood-2014-10-608133
Europe PubMed Central 25896651
Pubmed 25896651
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