CCBIO Seminar November 13, 2025 – Vincenzo Ciminale
Welcome to the CCBIO seminar series in the fall term of 2025! Open to all in auditorium 4, BBB. No registration necessary. Speaker is Prof. Vincenzo Ciminale from the Istituto Oncologico Veneto, Padova, Italy.
Speaker: Prof. Vincenzo Ciminale (external link), MD, Istituto Oncologico Veneto, Padova, Italy
Title: "STRESS FOR SUCCESS”: UNLOCKING VENETOCLAX SENSITIVITY IN T-ALL THROUGH THE mTORC1–ISR–BMF AXIS
Chair: Bjørn Tore Gjertsen
Place: Auditorium 4, BB-building (external link)
When: November 13, 2025, at 14.30-15.30
No registration necessary.
Abstract:
Refractory/relapsed T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (R/R T-ALL) remains a major therapeutic challenge at present. Our recent studies showed that inhibition of mTORC1 markedly sensitizes T-ALL cell lines and patient-derived xenografts (PDXs) to the BCL-2 inhibitor Venetoclax. RNAseq, gene set enrichment analysis, and analysis of the temporal trajectories of response to the mTORC1 inhibitor Everolimus revealed that induction of cell death was dependent on sustained engagement of the integrated stress response (ISR), resulting in induction of BMF, a proapoptotic protein of the BCL-2 family. The effects on cell death were phenocopied by the bisteric mTORC1 inhibitor RMC6272 or by genetic silencing of the mTORC1 cofactor Raptor. Genetic silencing of the ISR master regulator ATF4 also phenocopied these effects, confirming ISR engagement as a critical mediator of cytotoxicity. Conversely, epigenetic silencing or siRNA-mediated knockdown of BMF conferred resistance to Everolimus, whereas histone deacetylase inhibition restored BMF expression and drug sensitivity. Combined treatment with Everolimus and Venetoclax elicited potent, ISR-dependent antitumor activity in vivo.
These findings provide insight into the links between mTORC1 and the ISR and furnish proof-of-concept evidence for mTORC1 inhibition and sustained ISR activation as a viable strategy to overcome Venetoclax resistance to in T-ALL. Expression of BMF, a key mediator of this process, could predict response to this combination therapy.
The CCBIO Seminar series
CCBIO has a monthly research seminar where invited guests and international or national speakers focus on current research topics and updates.
The CCBIO Seminar series fulfills several aims.
- Firstly, it conveys relevant biomarker research to the local scientific community and students and younger researchers in particular, providing the ground for future recruitment.
- Secondly, it is part of two formal courses, BMED380 on the master level, and together with the CCBIO Annual Symposium, forms CCBIO902, a PhD-level course.
- Last, but not least, the CCBIO seminars are an important arena for informal interaction between international researchers, CCBIO PIs, and other CCBIO staff as well as interested researchers and students in general.
All interested researchers, students, and others are welcome!