A novel peptide biosensor for screening ABL1 activity in vitro: a
challenge for precision therapy in BCR-ABL1 and BCR-ABL1 like leukemias.
Abstract
The pathogenic role of the overactivated ABL1 tyrosine kinase (TK)
pathway is well recognized in some forms of BCR-ABL1 like acute
lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL); TK inhibitors represent a useful
therapeutic choice in these patients who respond poorly to conventional
chemotherapy. Here we report a novel peptide biosensor (PABL)-ELISA
assay to investigate ABL1 activity in four immortalized leukemic cell
lines with different genetic background. The PABL sequence comprises an
ABL1 tyrosine (Y) phosphorylation site and a targeting sequence which
increases the specificity for ABL1; additional peptides (Y-site-mutated
(PABL-F) and fully-phosphorylated (PPHOSPHO-ABL) biosensors) were
included in the assay. After incubation with whole cell lysates, average
PABL phosphorylation was significantly increased (basal versus PABL
phosphorylation: 6.84 ± 1.46% versus 32.44 ± 3.25%, p-value
< 0.0001, two-way ANOVA, Bonferroni post-test, percentages
relative to PPHOSPHO-ABL in each cell line). Cell lines expressing
ABL1-chimeric proteins (K562, ALL-SIL) presented the higher TK activity
on PABL; a lower signal was instead observed for NALM6 and REH
(p<0.001 and p<0.05 versus K562, respectively).
Phosphorylation was ABL1-mediated, as demonstrated by the specific
inhibition of imatinib (p<0.001 for K562, NALM6, ALL-SIL and
p<0.01 for REH) in contrast to ruxolitinib (JAK2-inhibitor),
and occurred on the ABL1 Y-site, as demonstrated by PABL-F whose
phosphorylation was comparable to basal levels. While requiring further
optimization and validation in leukemic blasts to be of clinical
interest, the PABL-based ELISA assay provides a novel in vitro tool for
screening both the aberrant ABL1 activity in BCR-ABL1 like ALL leukemic
cells and their potential response to TK inhibitors.