Background: Bruton’s tyrosine kinase (BTK) is a member of the Tec family of protein tyrosine kinases. Mutations of BTK have been associated with a block in B cell development, and are causal to X-linked agammaglobulinemia (XLA) in humans. Bcr-Abl is a constitutively active tyrosine kinase that is essential for the transforming capacity of Bcr-Abl. Using phosphoproteomics we have shown that BTK is consistently tyrosine phosphorylated in Bcr-Abl expressing Ba/F3 cells [

Griswold et al. Mol Cell Biol. 2006;26(16):6082–93.
]. Since BTK has also been implicated in resistance to imatinib [
Hofmann et al. Lancet 2002;359(9305):481–6
] and one study [
Feldhahn et al. J Exp Med. 2005; 201(11):1837–52
] had suggested a role of BTK in Bcr-Abl-induced transformation we decided to test whether BTK may be a critical node in Bcr-Abl transformation and potential drug target in imatinib-resistant Bcr-Abl-positive cells.

Results: We depleted BTK in Ba/F3 and 32D cells expressing native and kinase domain (KD) mutant (E255K and T315I) Bcr-Abl, using shRNA. BTK levels were reduced to <10% of controls, but no differences in viability and cell proliferation were observed. Additionally, responses to imatinib were not affected by BTK depletion. We further tested the effects of reversible (PCI-33918) and irreversible (PCI-31523) small molecule inhibitors of BTK on the above cell lines as well as human Ph+ B-lymphoblastic lines. Selective BTK inhibition did not impact cell proliferation. Lastly, BTK inhibition had no effect on Bcr-Abl-mediated transformation of primary murine hematopoietic cells in colony forming assays.

Conclusion: Despite the fact the BTK is consistently tyrosine phosophorylated in Bcr-Abl expressing cells, our data suggests it is not essential for Bcr-Abl-mediated transformation of lymphoid or myeloid cells.

Author notes

Disclosure:Employment: Lee Honigberg is employed by Pharmacyclics.

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