Thrombocytopenia induced by the histone deacetylase inhibitor abexinostat involves p53-dependent and-independent mechanisms

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Abstract

Abexinostat is a pan histone deacetylase inhibitor (HDACi) that demonstrates efficacy in malignancy treatment. Like other HDACi, this drug induces a profound thrombocytopenia whose mechanism is only partially understood. We have analyzed its effect at doses reached in patient plasma on in vitro megakaryopoiesis derived from human CD34\+ cells. When added at day 0 in culture, abexinostat inhibited CFU-MK growth, megakaryocyte (MK) proliferation and differentiation. These effects required only a short incubation period. Decreased proliferation was due to induction of apoptosis and was not related to a defect in TPO/MPL/JAK2/STAT signaling. When added later (day 8), the compound induced a dose-dependent decrease (up to 10-fold) in proplatelet (PPT) formation. Gene profiling from MK revealed a silencing in the expression of DNA repair genes with a marked RAD51 decrease at protein level. DNA double-strand breaks were increased as attested by elevated cH2AX phosphorylation level. Moreover, ATM was phosphorylated leading to p53 stabilization and increased BAX and p21 expression. The use of a p53 shRNA rescued apoptosis, and only partially the defect in PPT formation. These results suggest that HDACi induces a thrombocytopenia by a p53-dependent mechanism along MK differentiation and a p53-dependent and-independent mechanism for PPT formation. © 2013 Macmillan Publishers Limited All rights reserved.

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Ali, A., Bluteau, O., Messaoudi, K., Palazzo, A., Boukour, S., Lordier, L., … Debili, N. (2013). Thrombocytopenia induced by the histone deacetylase inhibitor abexinostat involves p53-dependent and-independent mechanisms. Cell Death and Disease, 4(7). https://doi.org/10.1038/cddis.2013.260

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