Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.20658
Title: Overcoming imatinib resistance conferred by the BIM deletion polymorphism in chronic myeloid leukemia with splice-switching antisense oligonucleotides
Authors: Liu, J
Bhadra, M
Sinnakannu, J.R
Yue, W.L
Tan, C.W
Rigo, F
Ong, S.T 
Roca, X
Keywords: antisense oligonucleotide
BH3 protein
BIM protein
cis acting element
imatinib
protein tyrosine kinase inhibitor
RNA isoform
serine arginine rich splicing factor
alternative RNA splicing
apoptosis
Article
BIM gene
cancer adjuvant therapy
cancer resistance
chronic myeloid leukemia
chronic myeloid leukemia cell line
controlled study
DNA sequence
drug mechanism
enzyme inhibition
exon
gene deletion
gene switching
genetic association
genetic code
human
human cell
K-562 cell line
KCL-22 cell line
protein domain
RNA splicing
Issue Date: 2017
Citation: Liu, J, Bhadra, M, Sinnakannu, J.R, Yue, W.L, Tan, C.W, Rigo, F, Ong, S.T, Roca, X (2017). Overcoming imatinib resistance conferred by the BIM deletion polymorphism in chronic myeloid leukemia with splice-switching antisense oligonucleotides. Oncotarget 8 (44) : 77567-77585. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.20658
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
Abstract: Many tyrosine kinase-driven cancers, including chronic myeloid leukemia (CML), are characterized by high response rates to specific tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) like imatinib. In East Asians, primary imatinib resistance is caused by a deletion polymorphism in Intron 2 of the BIM gene, whose product is required for TKI-induced apoptosis. The deletion biases BIM splicing from exon 4 to exon 3, generating splice isoforms lacking the exon 4-encoded pro-apoptotic BH3 domain, which impairs the ability of TKIs to induce apoptosis. We sought to identify splice-switching antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs) that block exon 3 but enhance exon 4 splicing, and thereby resensitize BIM deletion-containing cancers to imatinib. First, we mapped multiple cis-acting splicing elements around BIM exon 3 by minigene mutations, and found an exonic splicing enhancer acting via SRSF1. Second, by a systematic ASO walk, we isolated ASOs that corrected the aberrant BIM splicing. Eight of 67 ASOs increased exon 4 levels in BIM deletion-containing cells, and restored imatinib-induced apoptosis and TKI sensitivity. This proof-of-principle study proves that resistant CML cells by BIM deletion polymorphism can be resensitized to imatinib via splice-switching BIM ASOs. Future optimizations might yield a therapeutic ASO as precision-medicine adjuvant treatment for BIM-polymorphism-associated TKI-resistant CML and other cancers. @ Liu et al.
Source Title: Oncotarget
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/179546
ISSN: 19492553
DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.20658
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
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