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Novel mode of action of c-kit tyrosine kinase inhibitors leading to NK cell-dependent antitumor effects

Authors :
Salah Mecheri
Jonhantan A. Fletcher
Kris Thielemans
Florent Crépineau
Jacky Bernard
Caroline Flament
Julien Taieb
Isabelle Tchou
Jean-Yves Blay
J.F. Emile
Cédric Ménard
Alain Spatz
Vladimir Lazar
Eric Angevin
Véronique Chung-Scott
Magali Terme
François M. Lemoine
Laurence Zitvogel
Christophe Borg
Hiro Wakasugi
Ali G. Turhan
Michael Heinrich
Thomas Tursz
Axel Le Cesne
Koji Maruyama
Caroline Robert
Physiology
Publication Year :
2004
Publisher :
The American Society for Clinical Investigation, 2004.

Abstract

Mutant isoforms of the KIT or PDGF receptors expressed by gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs) are considered the therapeutic targets for STI571 (imatinib mesylate; Gleevec), a specific inhibitor of these tyrosine kinase receptors. Case reports of clinical efficacy of Gleevec in GISTs lacking the typical receptor mutations prompted a search for an alternate mode of action. Here we show that Gleevec can act on host DCs to promote NK cell activation. DC-mediated NK cell activation was triggered in vitro and in vivo by treatment of DCs with Gleevec as well as by a loss-of-function mutation of KIT. Therefore, tumors that are refractory to the antiproliferative effects of Gleevec in vitro responded to Gleevec in vivo in an NK cell-dependent manner. Longitudinal studies of Gleevec-treated GIST patients revealed a therapy-induced increase in IFN-gamma production by NK cells, correlating with an enhanced antitumor response. These data point to a novel mode of antitumor action for Gleevec.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....dba8f356d83f48f34253f21d8cddb908