scholarly journals Abnormal bone marrow microenvironment: the “harbor” of acute lymphoblastic leukemia cells

Blood Science ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 29-34
Author(s):  
Zehui Chen ◽  
Yaxin Zheng ◽  
Yaling Yang ◽  
Junnan Kang ◽  
M. James You ◽  
...  
2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sana Usmani ◽  
Urmila Sivagnanalingam ◽  
Olena Tkachenko ◽  
Leti Nunez ◽  
Jessica Shand ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 1466-1466
Author(s):  
Christopher D Chien ◽  
Elizabeth D Hicks ◽  
Paul P Su ◽  
Haiying Qin ◽  
Terry J Fry

Abstract Abstract 1466 Pediatric acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is the most common childhood malignancy. Although cure rates for this disease are approximately 90%, ALL remains one of the leading causes cancer-related deaths in children. Thus, new treatments are needed for those patients that do not respond to or recur following standard chemotherapy. Understanding the mechanisms underlying resistance of pediatric ALL to therapy offers one approach to improving outcomes. Recent studies have demonstrated the importance of communication between cancer cells and their microenvironment and how this contributes to the progression and therapeutic resistance but this has not been well studied in the context of ALL. Since the bone marrow is presumed to be the site of initiation of B precursor ALL we set out in our study to determine how ALL cells utilize the bone marrow milieu in a syngeneic transplantable model of preB cell ALL in immunocompetent mice. In this model, intravenously injected preB ALL develops first in the bone marrow, followed by infiltration into the spleen, lymph node, and liver. Using flow cytometry to detect the CD45.2 isoform following injection into B6CD45.1+ congenic recipients, leukemic cells can be identified in the bone marrow as early as 5 days after IV injection with a sensitivity of 0.01%-0.1%. The pre-B ALL line is B220+/CD19+/CD43+/BP1+/IL-7Ralpha (CD127)+/CD25-/Surface IgM-/cytoplasmic IgM+ consistent with a pre-pro B cell phenotype. We find that increasing amounts of leukemic infiltration in the bone marrow leads to an accumulation of non-malignant developing B cells at stages immediately prior to the pre-pro B cell (CD43+BP1-CD25-) and a reduction in non-malignant developing pre B cells at the developmental stage just after to the pre-pro B cell stage (CD43+BP1+CD25+). These data potentially suggest occupancy of normal B cell developmental niches by leukemia resulting in block in normal B cell development. Further supporting this hypothesis, we find significant reduction in early progression of ALL in aged (10–12 month old) mice known to have a deficiency in B cell developmental niches. We next explored whether specific factors that support normal B cell development can contribute to progression of precursor B cell leukemia. The normal B cell niche has only recently been characterized and the specific contribution of this niche to early ALL progression has not been extensively studied. Using a candidate approach, we examined the role of specific cytokines such as Interleukin-7 (IL-7) and thymic stromal lymphopoietin (TSLP) in early ALL progression. Our preB ALL line expresses high levels of IL-7Ralpha and low but detectable levels of TLSPR. In the presence of IL-7 (0.1 ng/ml) and TSLP (50 ng/ml) phosphSTAT5 is detectable indicating that these receptors are functional but that supraphysiologic levels of TSLP are required. Consistent with the importance of IL-7 in leukemia progression, preliminary data demonstrates reduced lethality of pr-B cell ALL in IL-7 deficient mice. Overexpression of TSLP receptor (TSLPR) has been associated with high rates of relapse and poor overall survival in precursor B cell ALL. We are currently generating a TSLPR overepressing preBALL line to determine the effect on early ALL progression and are using GFP-expressing preB ALL cells to identify the initial location of preB ALL occupancy in the bone marrow. In conclusion, or model of early ALL progression provides insight into the role of the bone marrow microenvironment in early ALL progression and provides an opportunity to examine how these microenvironmental factors contribute to therapeutic resistance. Given recent advances in immunotherapy for hematologic malignancies, the ability to study this in an immunocompetent host will be critical. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (21) ◽  
pp. 3699-3699
Author(s):  
Na Yuan ◽  
Lin Song ◽  
Suping Zhang ◽  
Weiwei Lin ◽  
Yan Cao ◽  
...  

Abstract The t (1; 19) subtype leukemia accounts for a quarter of pre-B acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) and up to 5% of all ALL patients. Despite plausible remission rate, current treatment regimen on the pediatric pre-B ALL is associated with side effects and CNS relapse, which poses the need for more effective and safer drugs. Bafilomycin A1 (Baf-A1) is known as an inhibitor of late phase of autophagy by inhibiting fusion between autophagosomes and lysosomes as well as by inhibiting lysosomal degradation. Here we show that Baf-A1 of low concentration (1 nM) effectively and specifically inhibits and kills the pre-B ALL cells. E2A/Pbx1 fusion gene positivepre-B ALL 697 cells were used for In vitro experiments. The results of flow cytometry analysis and western blotting showed that Baf-A1 induced cell cycle arrest and proliferation inhibition of ALL cells by upregualting cell cycle negative regulators and downregulating cell cycle positive regulators. In contrast, AML and CML cell lines were insensitive to Baf-A1 treatment. Western blotting and confocal observation on protein LC3 also showed that Baf-A1 at 1 nM blocked basal autophagic flux. Baf-A1 treatment activated mTOR signaling and induced the formation of Becn1–Bcl-2 complex to inhibit the induction of autophagy. Furthermore, apoptosis was induced in ALL cells treated with Baf-A1 for 72 h. However, procaspase-3 and poly-(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) were not cleaved in these cells. We observed that AIF relocalized to the nucleus after 72h Baf-A1 treatment by confocal and immunoblotting. Knockdown of AIF significantly attenuated apoptosis induced by Baf-A1. These data suggest that Baf-A1 targets mitochondria membrane to trigger apoptosis via AIF pathway. In the in vivo experiment, Baf-A1 treatment extended survival and improved pathology of 697 xenograft mice, and significantly reduced the E2A/PBX1 positive leukemia cells in the bone marrow of mice. In vivomouse toxicity assay confirms Baf-A1 as a safe compound. The bone marrow cells of pre-B ALL leukemia patients were sorted against CD133+CD19+ markers, and treatment with Baf-A1 induced a clear inhibition on the CD133+CD19+ primary cells with a significant increased cell death in the sorted B-ALL patient samples. Conversely, Baf-A1 had no inhibitory effect on the bone marrow cells isolated from acute myeloid leukemia patients and healthy people. In summary, Baf-A1 treatment at low concentration effectively and specifically inhibited autophagy by activating mTOR and inducing beclin1-Bcl-2 interaction and induced AIF-dependent apoptosis in t (1; 19) pre-B ALL 697 cells. In the pre-B ALL xenograft mouse model, Baf-A1 specifically targets the leukemia cells while sparing normal cells. More importantly, Baf-A1 potently inhibits and kills the primary cells from pediatric pre-B ALL patients both at initial diagnosis and relapse without compromising normal human hematopoietic cells, all proposing Baf-A1 as a promising drug candidate for this pre-B ALL. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (21) ◽  
pp. 3569-3569
Author(s):  
Ye Shen ◽  
Chun Shik Park ◽  
Koramit Suppipat ◽  
Takeshi Yamada ◽  
Toni-Ann Mistretta ◽  
...  

Abstract Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is the most common hematological malignancy in children. Although risk-adaptive therapy, CNS-directed chemotherapy and supportive care have improved the survival of ALL patients, disease relapse is still the leading cause of cancer-related death in children. Therefore, new drugs or novel multi-drug combinations are needed as frontline treatments for high-risk patients and as salvage agents for relapsed disease. T-cell ALL (T-ALL) is a subset of ALL that exhibits activating mutations of NOTCH1 in more than 50% of the patients. However, the use of gamma-secretase inhibitors to reduce NOTCH1 activity has not been successful in patients due to limited response and toxicity. Therefore, identification of genetic factors that cooperate with T-ALL leukemogenesis is needed for the development of alternative therapies. KLF4 is a transcription factor that functions as a tumor suppressor or an oncogene depending on cellular context. Our data showed significant reduction of KLF4 transcripts in lymphoblasts from T-ALL patients compared to blood and bone marrow cells from healthy individuals. In consistent with reduced KLF4 levels, these patients exhibit hyper-methylation of CpG islands located between nt -811 and +1190 relative to KLF4 transcription start site. From these findings we hypothesized that KLF4 has tumor suppressor function in T-ALL leukemogenesis. To test our hypothesis, we transduced 5-FU treated bone marrow (BM) cells from control (Klf4fl/fl), Klf4 null (Klf4fl/fl; Vav-iCre) and Klf4 heterozygous (Klf4fl/+; Vav-iCre) mice with retrovirus carrying a NOTCH1 activating mutant (L1601P-ΔP) and then transplanted these BM cells into irradiated recipient mice. In contrast to controls, mice transplanted with transduced Klf4-null BM cells developed T-ALL with significantly higher penetrance (Klf4 null 76.5% v.s. control 21.3%) and shorter latency (Klf4 null 93 days v.s. control 130 days). Interestingly, Klf4 heterozygous group shows similar survival kinetics as Klf4 null group, suggesting that Klf4 haploinsufficiency is enough to accelerate onset of leukemia. To investigate the effect of Klf4 deletion in established leukemia cells, we transplanted NOTCH1 L1601P-ΔP transduced BM cells from Klf4fl/fl; CreER+ mice to induce leukemia. Post-transplantation deletion of the Klf4 gene by tamoxifen administration was able to accelerate T-ALL development compared to mice injected with vehicle. On the cellular level, loss of KLF4 led to increased proliferation of leukemia cells as assessed by in vivo BrdU incorporation, which correlated with decreased levels of p21 protein. Limited dilution transplantation of primary leukemia cells into secondary recipients showed a 9-fold increase of leukemia initiating cells (LIC) frequency in Klf4null leukemia cells compared to controls, suggesting that KLF4 controls expansion of LIC in T-ALL. To elucidate molecular mechanism underlying KLF4 regulation in T-ALL cells, we performed microarray and ChIP-Seq in control and Klf4 null CD4+CD8+ leukemia cells. Combined analyses revealed 202 genes as KLF4 direct targets, of which 11 genes are also deregulated in human T-ALL cells by comparing with published microarray datasets. One of the top upregulated genes is Map2k7, which encodes a kinase upstream of the JNK pathway. Immunoblots in leukemia cells confirmed increased expression of MAP2K7 protein and enhanced phosphorylation of its downstream targets JNK and ATF2. To further investigate the role of JNK pathway in T-ALL, we tested JNK inhibitor SP600125 in human T-ALL cell lines (KOPTK1, DND41, CCRF-CEM, MOLT3). Interestingly, SP600125 showed dose-dependent cytotoxicity in all human T-ALL cell lines tested regardless of their NOTCH1 status. Overall our results showed for the first time that KLF4 functions as a tumor suppressor in T-ALL by regulating proliferation of leukemia cells and frequency of LIC. Additional study elucidated that KLF4 suppresses the JNK pathway via direct transcriptional regulation of MAP2K7. Moreover, the vulnerability of human T-ALL cell lines to JNK inhibition provides a novel target for future therapy in T-ALL patients. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 116 (21) ◽  
pp. 1027-1027
Author(s):  
Zhongbo Hu ◽  
Xiaomiao Li ◽  
David Ostrov ◽  
William Slayton

Abstract Abstract 1027 Integrin VLA-5 (α5β1, CD49e/CD29) plays an important role in hematopoietic cells functioning as well as in promoting tumor angiogenesis and tumor metastasis. Molecules targeting VLA-5 can be rapidly developed into anti-inflammatory and anti-tumor pharmaceuticals. VLA-5 is highly expressed on Ph+ leukemia cells and VLA-5 inhibitory antibodies can significantly inhibit the adhesion of Ph+ leukemia cells to human fibronectin. We generated an atomic homology model of VLA-5 based on the crystal structure of the extracellular segment of integrin αVβ3 in complex with a cyclic peptide presenting the Arg-Gly-Asp sequence and utilized this structure-based approach to identify VLA-5 binding drug-like small molecules. We selected the Arg-Gly-Asp binding residues and the epitopes of VLA-5 antibody as the target for small molecule binding using SPHERE_SELECT in DOCK6. The grid-based scoring system was used for scoring with the non-bonded force field energy function. The 100 highest scoring small molecules were assayed in an in vitro adhesion assay using leukemia cell lines and solid phase assay. This approach identified several leading small-molecule compounds, V10, V20, V37 and L4. Their IC50 are respectively 22.5μM, 23.7μM, 32.0μM and 28.9μM. These compounds can inhibit the adhesion of VLA-5 expressing Philadelphia chromosome positive leukemia to both human fibronectin and bone marrow stromal cells. Compounds V10 and V20 also significantly inhibited the growth of Ph+ leukemia cells. These compounds can enhance the effect of imatinib and dasatinib to kill Ph+ leukemia cells when cultured contacting with bone marrow stromal cells. We are currently testing the synergistic effect of these compounds with tyrosine kinase inhibitors to treat the Ph+ acute lymphoblastic leukemia in NOD/SCID animal model. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


1986 ◽  
Vol 315 (9) ◽  
pp. 538-542 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zeev Estrov ◽  
Tom Grunberger ◽  
Ian D. Dubé ◽  
Yao-Ping Wang ◽  
Melvin H. Freedman

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