4.7 Article

Investigating Potential Cardiovascular Toxicity of Two Anti-Leukemia Drugs of Asciminib and Ponatinib in Zebrafish Embryos

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms231911711

Keywords

zebrafish; anti-cancer drug; asciminib; ponatinib; cardiovascular toxicity; molecular docking

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Technology MOST [MOST 108-2313-B-033-001-MY3, MOST 107-2622-B-033-001-CC2, MOST 110-2314-B-195-008]
  2. MacKay Memorial Hospital intramural funding [MMH-111-125]

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This study aimed to observe the potential cardiovascular-related side effects after co-exposure to ASC and PON using zebrafish as an animal model. Zebrafish acutely exposed to both compounds showed no significant change in cardiac performance parameters at the no observed effect concentration (NOEC). However, a significant increase in nkx2.5 expression level and a substantial decrease in blood flow velocity were recorded, suggesting that combining these compounds at NOEC can cause mild cardiovascular-related side effects.
BCR-ABL, a fusion protein kinase, is a druggable target exclusively expressed in patients with chronic myeloid leukemia (CML). Several anti-leukemia medicines targeting this protein have been developed in recent years. However, therapeutic options are limited for CML patients bearing multiple BCR-ABL1 mutations. Ponatinib (PON), a potent tyrosinase inhibitor, was one of the approved drugs for managing BCR-ABL1 T315I mutant disease. However, treatment of patients with PON reported severe side effects related to cardiovascular events. Asciminib (ASC) was the first allosteric inhibitor approved to target the myristoyl pocket of BCR-ABL protein to inhibit protein activity. The different mechanism of inhibition opens the possibility of co-exposure with both medicines. Reports on cardiovascular side effects due to the combination use of PON + ASC in pre-clinical and clinical studies are minimal. Thus, this study aimed to observe the potential cardiovascular-related side effect after co-exposure to ASC and PON using zebrafish as an animal model. In this study, zebrafish were acutely exposed to both compounds. The cardiovascular physiology parameters and gene expression related to cardiovascular development were evaluated. We demonstrate that combining ASC with PON at no observed effect concentration (NOEC) did not cause any significant change in the cardiac performance parameter in zebrafish. However, a significant increase in nkx2.5 expression level and a substantial decrease in blood flow velocity were recorded, suggesting that combining these compounds at NOEC can cause mild cardiovascular-related side effects.

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