T-ALL patients treated with intensive chemotherapy achieve high rates of remission. However, frequent long-term toxicities and relapses into chemotherapy-refractory tumors constitute major clinical challenges which could be met by targeted therapies. c-MYC is a central oncogene in T-ALL, prompting the exploration of the efficacy of MYC inhibitors such as JQ1 (BET-bromodomain inhibitor), and SAHA (HDAC inhibitor). Using a standardized ex vivo drug screening assay, we show here that JQ1 and SAHA show competitive efficiency compared to inhibitors of proteasome, PI3K/AKT/mTOR and NOTCH pathways, and synergize in combination with Vincristine. We also compared for the first time the in vivo relevance of such associations in mice xenografted with human primary T-ALLs. Our data indicate that although treatments combining JQ1 or SAHA with chemotherapeutic regimens might represent promising developments in T-ALL, combinations will need to be tailored to specific subgroups of responsive patients, the profiles of which still remain to be precisely defined. © 2008-2014 Impact Journals, LLC.
CITATION STYLE
Loosveld, M., Castellano, R., Gon, S., Goubard, A., Crouzet, T., Pouyet, L., … Payet-Bornet, D. (2014). Therapeutic Targeting of c-Myc in T-Cell Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia (T-ALL). Oncotarget, 5(10), 3168–3172. https://doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.1873
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