Acquisition of MDR phenotype by leukemic cells is associated with increased caspase-3 activity and a collateral sensitivity to cold stress

2012 ◽  
Vol 113 (4) ◽  
pp. 1416-1425 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Cerezo ◽  
Miriam Lencina ◽  
Antonio J. Ruiz-Alcaraz ◽  
José Antonio Ferragut ◽  
Miguel Saceda ◽  
...  
Molecules ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 26 (4) ◽  
pp. 934
Author(s):  
Julia Quarti ◽  
Daianne N. M. Torres ◽  
Erika Ferreira ◽  
Raphael S. Vidal ◽  
Fabiana Casanova ◽  
...  

Multidrug resistance (MDR) is the main challenge in the treatment of chronic myeloid leukemia (CML), and P-glycoprotein (P-gp) overexpression is an important mechanism involved in this resistance process. However, some compounds can selectively affect MDR cells, inducing collateral sensitivity (CS), which may be dependent on P-gp. The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of piperine, a phytochemical from black pepper, on CS induction in CML MDR cells, and the mechanisms involved. The results indicate that piperine induced CS, being more cytotoxic to K562-derived MDR cells (Lucena-1 and FEPS) than to K562, the parental CML cell. CS was confirmed by analysis of cell metabolic activity and viability, cell morphology and apoptosis. P-gp was partially required for CS induction. To investigate a P-gp independent mechanism, we analyzed the possibility that poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase-1 (PARP-1) could be involved in piperine cytotoxic effects. It was previously shown that only MDR FEPS cells present a high level of 24 kDa fragment of PARP-1, which could protect these cells against cell death. In the present study, piperine was able to decrease the 24 kDa fragment of PARP-1 in MDR FEPS cells. We conclude that piperine targets selectively MDR cells, inducing CS, through a mechanism that might be dependent or not on P-gp.


2010 ◽  
Vol 8 (5) ◽  
pp. 145-146
Author(s):  
D. Cerezo ◽  
A.J. Ruiz-Alcaraz ◽  
M. Lencina ◽  
C. Bernal ◽  
M. Cánovas ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Anastazja Poczta ◽  
Aneta Rogalska ◽  
Małgorzata Łukawska ◽  
Agnieszka Marczak

Abstract The present study investigated the effect of cladribine (CLA) and six of its derivatives containing a formamidine group at position 6 (CLA-FDM, CLA-FPAZ, CLA-FPIR, CLA-FPIP, CLA-FHEX, and CLA-FMOR) on acute promyelocytic, lymphoblastic, and acute monocytic leukemia cells. The role of ATR kinase in deoxycytidine kinase (dCK) activation in response to DNA damage was assessed. The presence of DNA lesions was assessed by measurement phosphorylation of H2AX and by using the alkaline comet assay with proteinase K post-treatment following assessment of the cell cycle. Apoptotic events such as alterations in intracellular calcium concentration, caspase-3/7 activity and increased sub-G1 cell population were measured. CLA derivatives were highly effective against leukemic cells, showing high cytotoxicity, causing DNA fragmentation, and inducing DNA-protein cross-links in leukemic cells. CLA-FMOR showed the highest efficacy. CLA derivatives increased the levels of intracellular calcium ions, caspase-3/7 and the percentage of sub-G1 apoptotic cells and blocked cells in the S phase of the cell cycle to a greater extent than free CLA. The selective ATR inhibitor VE-821 significantly suppressed the increase in dCK activity and decreased basal dCK activity. The present results suggested that ATR kinase controls dCK activity in response to synthetic CLA derivatives.


Blood ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 112 (11) ◽  
pp. 1337-1337
Author(s):  
Yun Yu ◽  
Shao-Ming Shen ◽  
Li-Shun Wang ◽  
Qian Zhao ◽  
Guo-Qiang Chen

Abstract The acidic leucine-rich nuclear phosphoprotein 32B (ANP32B, also called APRIL) is a member of a conserved superfamily of nuclear proteins that includes ANP32A/pp32, a factor that binds histones and inhibits their acetylation and regulates cell growth and differentiation in a tissue-specific manner. Recently, ANP32B was identified as a novel histone chaperone, and it can interact with the transcription factor KLF5, leading to transcriptional repression of a KLF5-downstream gene through stimulation of promoter region-specific histone incorporation and inhibition of histone acetylation. Additionally, ANP32B and/or ANP32A also serve as adaptor molecules linking the HuR nucleocytoplasmic shuttle protein and the nuclear export receptor CRM1 to regulate the cytoplasmic accumulation of some transcripts such as c-fos and CD83. However, its biological activity is still poorly understood. By the two-dimensional electrophoresis plus MALDI-TOF/TOF tandem mass spectrometry-based analysis of subcellular protein expression profiles, we identified ANP32B protein to become a small fragment in the cytosols of apoptotic leukemic cell line induced by NSC606985, a camptothecin analog. The ongoing immunoblot analyses confirmed that ANP32B protein was cleaved during cellular context-independent and caspase-3 activation-dependent apoptosis induced by etoposide, doxorubin and arsenic trioxide besides NSC606985. Further in vitro proteolytic experiments supported that ANP32B is a direct substrate of caspase-3, and the site-directed mutagenesis analysis identified the unclassical aspartate (AEVD163) of ANP32B sequence to be the caspase-3 targeted sites. Thus, we investigated the potential role of ANP32B in apoptosis induction. Our results showed that the suppression of ANP32B expression by siRNA in acute myeloid leukemic cell line U937 cells strongly enhances NSC606985 and etoposide-induced apoptosis. Based on these findings, this work also analyzed molecular mechanism of anti-apoptotic effect of ANP32B, and some interesting findings were confirmed.


Blood ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 112 (11) ◽  
pp. 1796-1796
Author(s):  
A. Mario Q. Marcondes ◽  
Li Xiang ◽  
Brian P Milless ◽  
H. Joachim Deeg

Abstract The bone marrow microenvironment provides essential signals for the fate of normal hematopoietic and for leukemic cells. Contact with marrow stroma, which is part of the microenvironment, is generally thought to convey anti-apoptotic signals to (clonal) leukemia cells. Patients with low-grade myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) early in the disease course show high rates of apoptosis in normal and clonal marrow cells, mediated by tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFα) and other cytokines. As MDS advances and evolves to leukemia, clonal cells tend to become apoptosis resistant. We showed previously that the leukemia-derived cell line KG1a was resistant to TNFα-mediated apoptosis, but TNFα did induce caspase-3 activation and apoptosis in KG1a cells when co-cultured with the human marrow stroma cell line HS5 (derived from healthy marrow). Apoptosis was contact dependent and required expression of TNF receptor 1 on KG1a cells. Identical results were obtained in co-cultures with primary stroma cells. Gene expression profiling of KG1a cells showed that stroma contact resulted in significant upregulation of genes involved in apoptosis, including PYCARD and p53. To further dissect the relevant signaling pathways, we used a PhosphoScan proteomic LC-MS (Liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry) method to identify proteins that were phosphorylated in response to stroma contact. In parallel to KG1a we examined the parent cell line KG1, which is sensitive to TNFα mediated apoptosis. We determined the phosphorylation sites in proteins within the leukemic cell lines using MS2 and MS3 scans. Database searches were performed with X! Tandem and Mascot and results analyzed by PeptideProphet using data from a synthetic doubly-phosphorylated peptide as control. In KG1a cells cultured without stroma support, the peptide DJ-1/Park-7 was highly phosphorylated, and expression of p53 was inhibited as indicated by decreased levels of p53 mRNA and protein. In co-culture with stroma, KG1a cells expressed higher levels of p53 protein, and levels of phosphorylated DJ-1/ Park-7 were undetectable over a time course of 30 min to 24 hours. In apoptosis-sensitive KG1 cells constitutive DJ-1/Park-7 phosphorylation (in the absence of stroma contact) was undetectable, and p53 was expressed at higher levels than in KG1a cells, consistent with the observed activation of caspase-3 and induction of apoptosis in KG1 cells. Taken together, these data suggest that phosphorylation of DJ-1/Park-7, originally identified as an oncogene product involved in cellular transformation, oxidative stress responses, and transcriptional regulation, was associated with repression of p53 and resistance to TNFα-mediated apoptosis. The relevance of DJ-1/Park-7 (and other genes identified by the PhosphoScan proteomic method) in primary MDS cells is currently being investigated at the molecular and functional levels.


Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 116 (21) ◽  
pp. 2177-2177
Author(s):  
Duncan H Mak ◽  
Christa Manton ◽  
Michael Andreeff ◽  
Bing Z Carter

Abstract Abstract 2177 The antiapoptotic function of the inhibitors of apoptosis family of proteins (IAPs) is antagonized by mitochondria-released SMAC protein. The IAP-member XIAP suppresses apoptosis by directly binding and inhibiting caspase-9 and caspase-3, while cIAP1, a component of the cytoplasmic signaling complex containing TNF receptor associated factors, suppresses apoptosis via the caspase-8-mediated pathway. BV-6 (Genentech) is a bivalent SMAC-mimetic and has been shown to promote cell death by inducing cIAP autoubiquitination, NF-κB activation, and TNFα-dependent apoptosis. We examined its effect on leukemic cells and found that BV-6 only moderately induced apoptosis. The EC50 was found to be 15.3±5.1 μM at 48 hours in OCI-AML3 cells which are relatively sensitive. We then determined whether BV-6 sensitizes leukemic cells to the HDM2-inhibitor nutlin-3a and to Ara-C. p53 modulates the expression and activity of Bcl-2 family proteins and promotes the mitochondrial-mediated apoptosis. We showed previously that activation of p53 by nutlin-3a sensitizes AML cells to XIAP inhibition induced-death in part by promoting the release of SMAC from mitochondrion (Carter BZ et al., Blood 2010). We treated OCI-AML3 cells with BV-6, nutlin-3a or Ara-C, and BV-6+nutlin-3a or BV-6+Ara-C and found that the combination of BV-6 and nutlin-3a or BV-6 and Ara-C synergistically induced cell death in OCI-AML3 cells with a combination index (CI) of 0.27±0.11 and 0.22±0.05 (48 hours), respectively. To demonstrate that p53 activation is essential for the synergism of BV-6+nutlin-3a combination, we treated OCI-AML3 vector control and p53 knockdown cells with these two agents and found that the combination synergistically promoted cell death in the vector control (CI=0.47±0.15) but not in the p53 knockdown cells, as expected, while BV6+Ara-C was synergistic in both vector control and p53 knockdown cells (CI=0.15±0.03 and 0.08±0.03, respectively, 48 hours). BV-6 induced activation of caspase-8, caspase-9, and caspase-3 and decreased XIAP levels, but did not cause rapid cIAP1 degradation, as reported by others. To assess the contribution of death receptor-mediated apoptosis in BV-6-induced cell death, we treated Jurkat and caspase-8 mutated Jurkat cells (JurkatI9.2) with BV-6 and found that BV-6 induced cell death and significantly potentiated TRAIL-induced apoptosis in Jurkat cells (CI=0.14±0.08, 48 hours). Caspase-8 mutated JurkatI9.2 cells were significantly less sensitive to BV-6 than Jurkat cells and as expected, JurkatI9.2 was completely resistant to TRAIL. Collectively, we showed that the bivalent SMAC-mimetic BV-6 potentiates p53 activation-, chemotherapy-, and TRAIL-induced cell death, but has only minimal activity by itself in leukemic cells. SMAC-mimetics could be useful in enhancing the efficacy of different classes of therapeutic agents used in AML therapy. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2015 ◽  
Vol 331 (1) ◽  
pp. 11-20 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Cerezo ◽  
Manuel Cánovas ◽  
Pilar García-Peñarrubia ◽  
Elena Martín-Orozco

2010 ◽  
Vol 8 (5) ◽  
pp. 126
Author(s):  
M. Lencina ◽  
D. Cerezo ◽  
A.J. Ruiz-Alcaraz ◽  
P. Garcia-Peñarrubia ◽  
E. Martin-Orozco

2019 ◽  
Vol 19 (12) ◽  
pp. 1523-1534 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ali Hassanzadeh ◽  
Elham Hosseinzadeh ◽  
Saleheh Rezapour ◽  
Ghasem Vahedi ◽  
Navideh Haghnavaz ◽  
...  

Background: Chronic Myeloid Leukaemia (CML) starts in certain blood-forming cells of the bone marrow when cells acquire Philadelphia chromosome. Nowadays, scientists attempt to find novel and safe therapeutic agents and approaches for CML therapy using Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitors (TKIs), CML conventional treatment agents, has some restrictions and also adverse effects. Recently, it has been proposed that phytochemicals, such as flavonoids due to their low side effects and notable safety have the potential to be used for CML therapy. Materials and Methods: K-562 cells were exposed with three concentrations of the querectin (10, 40 and 80µM) for 12, 24 and 48 hours. After that, these cells apoptosis rate was estimated using Annexin-V/PI staining and flowcytometry analysis, and their proliferation rate was evaluated using 3-[4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl]-2,5 diphenyl tetrazolium bromide (MTT). Finally, the expression of the 70 and 90 kilodalton heat shock proteins (HSP70 and 90), methionine adenosyltransferase 2A (MAT2A), Forkhead box protein M1 (FOXM1), caspase-3 and -8, Bcl-X(L) and Bax involved in leukemic cells survival and proliferation was assessed using Real-Time PCR within 12, 24 and 48 hours after exposure with quercetin 40 and 80µM. Results: Considering consequences, querecetin induced apoptosis in K-562 cells, and also abrogated these cells proliferation. On the other hand, RT-PCR results showed a reduction in some of the candidate genes expression, especially HSP70, Bcl-X(L) and FOXM1, when cells were treated with quercetin 40 and 80µM. Also, Bax, caspase-3 and caspase-8 expression was significantly improved in K-562 cells upon quercetin exposure. Conclusion: We concluded that CML therapy by querecetin due to its anti-proliferative and anti-survival potentials could lead to the promising therapeutic outcome through targeting major survival and proliferation involved genes expression.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document