Efficacy of a novel BCL-xL degrader, DT2216, in preclinical models of JAK2-mutated post-MPN AML Journal Article


Authors: Wang, Z.; Skwarska, A.; Poigaialwar, G.; Chaudhry, S.; Rodriguez-Meira, A.; Sui, P.; Olivier, E.; Jia, Y.; Gupta, V.; Fiskus, W.; Ramage, C. L.; Zheng, G.; Schurer, A.; Gritsman, K.; Papapetrou, E. P.; Bhalla, K.; Zhou, D.; Mead, A. J.; Rampal, R. K.; Tyner, J. W.; Abbas, H. A.; Pemmaraju, N.; Tatarata, Q. Z.; Konopleva, M.
Article Title: Efficacy of a novel BCL-xL degrader, DT2216, in preclinical models of JAK2-mutated post-MPN AML
Abstract: Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) that evolves from myeloproliferative neoplasm (MPN) is known as post-MPN AML. Current treatments do not significantly extend survival beyond 12 months. B-cell lymphoma-extra large (BCL-xL) has been found to be overexpressed in leucocytes from patients with MPN, making it a potential therapeutic target. We investigated the role of BCL-xL in post-MPN AML and tested the efficacy of DT2216, a platelet-sparing BCL-xL proteolysis-targeting chimera, in preclinical models of post-MPN AML. We found that BCL2L1, the gene encoding BCL-xL, is expressed at higher levels in patients with post-MPN AML than in those with de novo AML. Single-cell multiomics analysis revealed that leukemia cells harboring both MPN-driver and TP53 mutations exhibited higher BCL2L1 expression and elevated scores for leukemia stem cell, megakaryocyte development, and erythroid progenitor than wild-type cells. BH3 profiling confirmed a strong dependence on BCL-xL in post-MPN AML cells. DT2216 alone, or in combination with standard AML/MPN therapies, effectively degraded BCL-xL, reduced the apoptotic threshold, and induced apoptosis in post-MPN AML cells. DT2216 effectively eliminated viable cells in JAK2-mutant AML cell lines, induced pluripotent stem cell–derived hematopoietic progenitor cells, primary samples, and reduced tumor burden in cell line–derived xenograft model in vivo by degrading BCL-xL. DT2216, either as a single agent or in combination with azacytidine, effectively inhibited the clonogenic potential of CD34+ leukemia cells from patients with post-MPN AML. In summary, our data indicate that the survival of post-MPN AML is BCL-xL dependent, and DT2216 may offer therapeutic advantage in this high-risk leukemia subset with limited treatment options. © 2025 American Society of Hematology
Journal Title: Blood
ISSN: 0006-4971
Publisher: American Society of Hematology  
Publication status: Online ahead of print
Date Published: 2025-03-31
Online Publication Date: 2025-03-31
Language: English
DOI: 10.1182/blood.2024027117
PUBMED: 40163809
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Raajit Kumar Rampal
    339 Rampal