Forschung & Innovation
Publikationen
Selective EV Protein Sorting and Pathway Perturbation in AML Upon Synergistic FLT3 and Hedgehog Pathway Inhibition
PMU Autor*innen
Martin Wolf, Heide-Marie Binder, Nicole Maeding, Dirk Strunk
Alle Autor*innen
C. Blöchl, Gabriele Blümel, Martin Wolf, G. Regl, Heide-Marie Binder, Suzana Tesanovic, Daniel Lankes, Nicole Maeding, P. Krenn, Dirk Strunk, Fritz Aberger, Christian G Huber
Fachzeitschrift
Journal of Extracellular Vesicles
Kurzfassung
Acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) is a haematologic malignancy with high relapse incidence and mortality. Approximately one-third of AML patients carry an fms-like tyrosine kinase 3 (FLT3) mutation, often associated with GLI expression and Hedgehog signalling. AML cells shape their microenvironment into a leukaemia-permissive space by releasing extracellular vesicles (EVs). EVs can transfer chemoresistance and thereby play an important role in refractory and relapsing diseases. Here, we discovered a synergistic effect of combined treatment with the FLT3 inhibitor Crenolanib and the Hedgehog pathway inhibitor HPI-1 in the AML cell lines MOLM-14 and MV4-11. In-depth comparative proteomics revealed alterations in the cellular and the EV proteome upon single or combined inhibition of FLT3 and GLI, highlighting affected pathways. By comparing cellular and EV proteomes, we found that transport of ribosomal proteins, such as RPS26 and RPL27A, and ErbB pathway members such as GAB1, GRB2 and SHC1 to EVs, is selectively avoided upon treatment with Crenolanib. These findings were corroborated by comparative proteomics of EVs derived from AML patients and healthy donors. Ribosomal and ErbB signalling pathway proteins may play an important role in microenvironmental modulation by EVs, and Crenolanib treatment potentially acts by interfering with leukaemia niche formation.