Biomarker to Enable Eradication of CML Stem Cells
- Technology Benefits
- By targeting CSC in specific tumor niches, this invention may present a novel and effective means of treating cells that have evaded eradication by other therapies. Unlike other approaches, this method:accounts for and compensates for the heterogeneity of most tumors;targets cancer stem cells, as opposed to the diverse, bulk population; and clarifies the relevance of cell cycle status within the tumor niche.
- Detailed Technology Description
- UC researchers have found that non-cycling stem cells in protected niches express distinctive patterns of Bcl-2 mRNA isoforms. Such information on cell cycle status and isoform profile may yield: A predictive biomarker for CSC drug susceptibility; A determination of cancer prognosis and progression; and An indicator of patient CSC response to anti-cancer therapies. l cycle status and isoform profile may yield:A predictive biomarker for CSC drug susceptibility; A determination of cancer prognosis and progression; and An indicator of patient CSC response to anti-cancer therapies.
- Industry
- Disease Diagnostic/Treatment
- Sub Category
- Cancer/Tumor
- Application No.
- 9194862
- Others
-
State Of Development
Inventors have identified characteristic ratios of specific, Bcl-2 family, mRNA-splice isoforms, which differ between tumor cell populations that are:
- · within vs. not in protected, tumor niches;
- · either CSC vs. normal cells, over the course of treatment; and
- · at various stages of the cell cycle.
Intellectual Property Info
Worldwide rights available for licensure (See WO2013070807)
Related Materials
Jamieson C.H.M. et al., (2008) Miscreant myeloproliferative disorder stem cells. Leukemia 22:2011-9.
Jamieson CH, et. al., (2004) Chronic versus acute myelogenous leukemia: a question of self-renewal, Cancer Cell, 6(6):531-3.
Jamieson CH, et. al., (2004) Granulocyte-macrophage progenitors as candidate leukemic stem cells in blast-crisis CML, N Engl J Med., 351(7):657-67.
Catriona Jamieson, M.D., Ph.D. Associate Professor of Medicine.
Crews, L.A. and C. H. Jamieson, (2012) Chronic Myeloid Leukemia Stem Cell Biology, Curr Hematol Malig Rep., 7(2):125-32.
Goff, DJ, et al. (2012) A Pan-BCL2 inhibitor renders bone-marrow-resident human leukemia stem cells sensitive to tyrosine kinase inhibition, Cell Stem Cell, 12(3):316-28
• Jamieson C.H. (2008) Chronic Myeloid Leukemia Stem Cells. Hematology 1:436-42.Related Technologies
Tech ID/UC Case
22549/2012-155-0
Related Cases
2012-155-0, 2009-187-0
- *Abstract
-
Chronic Myeloid Leukemia (CML) is known to be associated with a chromosomal transposition that yields a constitutively active BCR-ABL “fusion” kinase and current therapies include kinase inhibitors (e.g., imatinib and dasatinib) that are designed to “turn off” the constitutive activation of the fusion kinase. However, these are marginally effective in the later, more aggressive stages of the disease. One cause of refractory disease is the residence of cancer stem cells (CSC) in protected tumor niches where they exit the cell cycle and revert to a quiescent state, which does not respond to the standard line of care. Such cells are found to have an altered isoform expression profile of Bcl2- family members, which may provide new means to attack stem cells that are refractory to first-line therapies.
- *IP Issue Date
- Nov 24, 2015
- *Principal Investigator
-
Name: Kristen Smith
Department:
Name: Daniel Goff
Department:
Name: Catriona Jamieson
Department:
- Country/Region
- USA

