Multimodal gene and targeted drug therapy for chronic myelogenous leukemia: Computational target analysis and therapeutic validation.

Journal: BioRxiv : The Preprint Server For Biology
Published:
Abstract

: Developing an efficient and safe therapy necessitates a mechanistic understanding of the complex underlying pathology and manipulation of the multiple pathways at the molecular and genetic level. Network-based simulation of chronic myeloid leukemia (CML), a relatively well-understood cancer model, revealed the dynamics of simultaneously expressing pro-apoptotic BIM and silencing pro-survival MCL-1 in combination with the BCR-ABL-targeted tyrosine kinase inhibitor dasatinib. Viral/nonviral chimeric nanoparticles (ChNPs) composed of a BIM-expressing adeno-associated virus (AAV) core and a degradable polymeric shell that encapsulates MCL-1 siRNA (BIM/MCL-1 ChNPs) synergistically and selectively killed BCR-ABL+ CML cells in combination with dasatinib. In a mouse CML model, the BIM/MCL-1 ChNPs and dasatinib combination therapy suppressed proliferation of BCR-ABL+ hematopoietic cells and prevented leukemic infiltration of organs. The synergistic anti-leukemic effect was further pronounced in an acute phase model of the disease. This study investigated a strategy of developing a versatile and tunable multimodal therapy assisted by a computational toolset that analyzes the molecular foundation of a disease and predicts therapeutic response. The interdisciplinary approach developed and validated in this study can be used in discovering new therapies for cancer and other diseases. null

Authors
Margaret Lugin, Winnie Lei, Rebecca Lee, Jee Chung, Nicholas Katritsis, Woochang Hwang, Angela Fleischman, Namshik Han, Young Kwon