Abstract 3073: Targeting chronic lymphocytic leukemia by interfering glutathione synthesis using a novel therapeutic enzyme cyst(e)inase (AEB3103)

Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) is the most common adult leukemia in the Western countries. Despite recent advance in new therapeutic agents that have improved treatment outcomes, CLL remains incurable due in part to the inability to completely eradicate the leukemia cells in vivo. Previous studies showed that CLL cells have high intrinsic oxidative stress and are highly dependent on cellular antioxidant glutathione (GSH) to maintain redox balance and cell viability. One logical strategy to impact CLL cells would be to abrogate the glutathione protection of CLL cells in vivo. Recently we discovered that primary leukemia cells isolated from CLL patients were unable to effectively utilize cystine for GSH synthesis due to low expression of the cystine transporter Xc-, and that bone marrow stromal cells highly express Xc- and effectively take up cystine for conversion to cysteine (Zhang et al: Nature Cell Biology, 2012). These findings provide a biochemical basis to develop novel strategies to effectively target leukemia cells in the stromal microenvironment and improve in vivo therapeutic activity. In this study, we tested the depletion of extracellular cystine and cysteine using a novel therapeutic enzyme-cyst(e)inase (AEB3103), as a potential way to block GSH synthesis in CLL cells and abolish the stromal protection of the leukemia cells. Our study showed that AEB3103 was very effective in depleting GSH in CLL cells and caused massive CLL cell death even in the presence of stromal cells. Importantly, AEB3103 could also overcome drug resistance of CLL cells with p53 deficiency both in primary leukemia cells isolated from CLL patients with 17p deletion and mouse leukemic cells isolated from mouse model we recently reported (Liu et al: Leukemia, 2014). In addition, AEB3103 showed very low toxicity to normal cells. These promising in vitro data warrant further animal studies, which are currently on ongoing using the CLL mouse model with TCL1-Tg:p53-/- genotype. Our study suggests that AEB3103 and its combination with standard anti-CLL drugs may potentially be useful for clinical treatment of CLL, even for the more aggressive CLL subtypes with unfavorable cytogenetic alterations such as those with chromosome17p deletion and p53 mutations, and may improve in vivo therapeutic activity. Citation Format: Jinyun Liu, Li Feng, Everett M. Stone, Joseph Tyler, Scott W. Rowlinson, Michael J. Keating, Peng Huang. Targeting chronic lymphocytic leukemia by interfering glutathione synthesis using a novel therapeutic enzyme cyst(e)inase (AEB3103). [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 107th Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research; 2016 Apr 16-20; New Orleans, LA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2016;76(14 Suppl):Abstract nr 3073.