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Endothelial E-selectin inhibition improves acute myeloid leukaemia therapy by disrupting vascular niche-mediated chemoresistance

Author

Listed:
  • Valerie Barbier

    (Translational Research Institute)

  • Johanna Erbani

    (Translational Research Institute)

  • Corrine Fiveash

    (Translational Research Institute)

  • Julie M. Davies

    (Translational Research Institute)

  • Joshua Tay

    (Translational Research Institute)

  • Michael R. Tallack

    (Translational Research Institute)

  • Jessica Lowe

    (Translational Research Institute)

  • John L. Magnani

    (GlycoMimetics Inc.)

  • Diwakar R. Pattabiraman

    (Translational Research Institute
    Molecular and Systems Biology, Norris Cotton Cancer Centre)

  • Andrew C. Perkins

    (Translational Research Institute
    Monash University)

  • Jessica Lisle

    (Translational Research Institute)

  • John E. J. Rasko

    (Centenary Institute, University of Sydney
    Royal Prince Alfred Hospital)

  • Jean-Pierre Levesque

    (Translational Research Institute)

  • Ingrid G. Winkler

    (Translational Research Institute)

Abstract

The endothelial cell adhesion molecule E-selectin is a key component of the bone marrow hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) vascular niche regulating balance between HSC self-renewal and commitment. We now report in contrast, E-selectin directly triggers signaling pathways that promote malignant cell survival and regeneration. Using acute myeloid leukemia (AML) mouse models, we show AML blasts release inflammatory mediators that upregulate endothelial niche E-selectin expression. Alterations in cell-surface glycosylation associated with oncogenesis enhances AML blast binding to E-selectin and enable promotion of pro-survival signaling through AKT/NF-κB pathways. In vivo AML blasts with highest E-selectin binding potential are 12-fold more likely to survive chemotherapy and main contributors to disease relapse. Absence (in Sele−/− hosts) or therapeutic blockade of E-selectin using small molecule mimetic GMI-1271/Uproleselan effectively inhibits this niche-mediated pro-survival signaling, dampens AML blast regeneration, and strongly synergizes with chemotherapy, doubling the duration of mouse survival over chemotherapy alone, whilst protecting endogenous HSC.

Suggested Citation

  • Valerie Barbier & Johanna Erbani & Corrine Fiveash & Julie M. Davies & Joshua Tay & Michael R. Tallack & Jessica Lowe & John L. Magnani & Diwakar R. Pattabiraman & Andrew C. Perkins & Jessica Lisle & , 2020. "Endothelial E-selectin inhibition improves acute myeloid leukaemia therapy by disrupting vascular niche-mediated chemoresistance," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 11(1), pages 1-15, December.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:natcom:v:11:y:2020:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-020-15817-5
    DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-15817-5
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