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Publication : Antitumor immunity augments the therapeutic effects of p53 activation on acute myeloid leukemia.

First Author  Hayashi Y Year  2019
Journal  Nat Commun Volume  10
Issue  1 Pages  4869
PubMed ID  31653912 Mgi Jnum  J:281338
Mgi Id  MGI:6377748 Doi  10.1038/s41467-019-12555-1
Citation  Hayashi Y, et al. (2019) Antitumor immunity augments the therapeutic effects of p53 activation on acute myeloid leukemia. Nat Commun 10(1):4869
abstractText  The negative regulator of p53, MDM2, is frequently overexpressed in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) that retains wild-type TP53 alleles. Targeting of p53-MDM2 interaction to reactivate p53 function is therefore an attractive therapeutic approach for AML. Here we show that an orally active inhibitor of p53-MDM2 interaction, DS-5272, causes dramatic tumor regressions of MLL-AF9-driven AML in vivo with a tolerable toxicity. However, the antileukemia effect of DS-5272 is markedly attenuated in immunodeficient mice, indicating the critical impact of systemic immune responses that drive p53-mediated leukemia suppression. In relation to this, DS-5272 triggers immune-inflammatory responses in MLL-AF9 cells including upregulation of Hif1alpha and PD-L1, and inhibition of the Hif1alpha-PD-L1 axis sensitizes AML cells to p53 activation. We also found that NK cells are important mediators of antileukemia immunity. Our study showed the potent activity of a p53-activating drug against AML, which is further augmented by antitumor immunity.
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