BCR::ABL1 kinase N-lobe mutants confer moderate to high degrees of resistance to asciminib.

Journal: Blood
Published:
Abstract

Secondary kinase domain mutations in BCR::ABL1 represent the most common cause of resistance to tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) therapy in patients with chronic myeloid leukemia. The first 5 approved BCR::ABL1 TKIs target the adenosine triphosphate (ATP)-binding pocket. Mutations confer resistance to these ATP-competitive TKIs and those approved for other malignancies by decreasing TKI affinity and/or increasing ATP affinity. Asciminib, the first highly active allosteric TKI approved for any malignancy, targets an allosteric regulatory pocket in the BCR::ABL1 kinase C-lobe. As a non-ATP-competitive inhibitor, the activity of asciminib is predicted to be impervious to increases in ATP affinity. Here, we report several known mutations that confer resistance to ATP-competitive TKIs in the BCR::ABL1 kinase N-lobe that are distant from the asciminib binding pocket yet unexpectedly confer in vitro resistance to asciminib. Among these is BCR::ABL1 M244V, which confers clinical resistance even to escalated asciminib doses. We demonstrate that BCR::ABL1 M244V does not impair asciminib binding, thereby invoking a novel mechanism of resistance. Molecular dynamic simulations of the M244V substitution implicate stabilization of an active kinase conformation through impact on the α-C helix as a mechanism of resistance. These N-lobe mutations may compromise the clinical activity of ongoing combination studies of asciminib with ATP-competitive TKIs.

Authors
Ariel Leyte Vidal, Diego Garrido Ruiz, Rosaanna Defilippis, Inga Leske, Delphine Rea, Stacey Phan, Kaeli Miller, Feifei Hu, Anjeli Mase, Yibing Shan, Oliver Hantschel, Matthew Jacobson, Neil Shah