AI Article Synopsis

  • - Pediatric MLL-rearranged acute myeloid leukemia (AML) has poor outcomes mainly due to relapse and drug resistance, necessitating new treatment options.
  • - Researchers used a drug-repositioning strategy to screen over 4,000 FDA-approved compounds, discovering that pyrvinium pamoate effectively eliminates MLL-rearranged AML cells at concentrations below 1000 nM.
  • - Pyrvinium shows a selective decrease in viability for leukemia cells compared to non-leukemic cells and may work by inhibiting mitochondrial respiration, making it a promising candidate for further studies in treating MLL-rearranged AML.

Article Abstract

Pediatric MLL-rearranged acute myeloid leukemia (AML) has a generally unfavorable outcome, primarily due to relapse and drug resistance. To overcome these difficulties, new therapeutic agents are urgently needed. Yet, implementing novel drugs for clinical use is a time-consuming, laborious, costly and high-risk process. Therefore, we applied a drug-repositioning strategy by screening drug libraries, comprised of >4000 compounds that are mostly FDA-approved, in a high-throughput format on primary MLL-rearranged AML cells. Here we identified pyrvinium pamoate (pyrvinium) as a novel candidate drug effective against MLL-rearranged AML, eliminating all cell viability at <1000 nM. Additional screening of identified drug hits on non-leukemic bone marrow samples, resulted in a decrease in cell viability of ∼50% at 1000 nM pyrvinium, suggesting a therapeutic window for targeting leukemic cells specifically. Validation of pyrvinium on an extensive panel of AML cell lines and primary AML samples showed comparable viabilities as the drug screen data, with pyrvinium achieving IC values of <80 nM in these samples. Remarkably, pyrvinium also induced cell toxicity in primary MLL-AF10 AML cells, an MLL-rearrangement associated with a poor outcome. While pyrvinium is able to inhibit the Wnt pathway in other diseases, this unlikely explains the efficacy we observed as β-catenin was not expressed in the AML cells tested. Rather, we show that pyrvinium co-localized with the mitochondrial stain in cells, and hence may act by inhibiting mitochondrial respiration. Overall, this study shows that pyrvinium is highly effective against MLL-rearranged AML in vitro, and therefore represents a novel potential candidate for further studies in MLL-rearranged AML.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7933809PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.tranon.2021.101048DOI Listing

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